Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
ARTICLE I.
Description
Section 1. The Act establishing the Arkansas
Board of Hearing Instrument Dispensers provides for examination and licensing
of persons who fit and dispense hearing instruments in the State of
Arkansas.
Section 2. Information
regarding this Board may be obtained by accessing the board's website.
ARTICLE II.
Meeting of the Board
Section 1.
The Board shall meet at least twice a year at a time and place designated by
the Chairman of the Board in his official call of such meetings. Provided,
however, additional special meetings may be held, if in the discretion of the
Chairman of the Board, such special meetings are necessary.
Section 2. Regular meetings may be called by
the Chairman of the Board giving ten (10) days' notice thereof. Such notice
shall be in writing and shall set forth the time and place of such meeting.
Special meetings of the Board may be called by the Chairman, at any reasonable
time, or shall be called by the Chairman at any time upon the request of a
majority of the members of the Board.
Section
3. Five (5) of the Seven (7) members of the Board shall constitute
a quorum. If a quorum is not present at the time of such called meeting, the
meeting shall be adjourned to a day to be designated by the Chairman.
ARTICLE III.
Duties and Powers of the Board
Section
1. It shall be the duty of the Chairman of the Board to preside at
all meetings of the Board. The Chairman shall exercise general supervision of
the affairs of the Board and shall have the usual powers of such office and any
other powers and duties as the Board may direct.
Section 2. It shall be the duty of the
Vice-Chairman to preside at any meeting at which the Chairman is unable to
attend. The Vice-Chairman shall assume the duties of Chairman in case the
Chairman becomes unable, for whatever reason, to handle the affairs of the
Board. If neither the Chairman nor Vice-Chairman is available, the
Secretary-Treasurer shall preside and/or handle the affairs of the
Board.
Section 3. It shall be the
duty of the Secretary-Treasurer, or with Board approval, the duty of the
Executive Director, to keep all the minutes and records of the Board. The
Secretary-Treasurer or Executive Director shall have custody of all fees
received by the Board, including application fees, license fees, renewal fees,
fines, penalties, and other payments, and shall be responsible for such funds,
and shall make an annual report to the appropriate authorities regarding the
disbursement of these funds. The Secretary-Treasurer or Executive Director
shall, with the approval of the Board, be responsible for the preparation of
the annual budget of the Board. The Executive Director of the Board is covered
by the Self-Insured Bond Program for Arkansas Government and Political
Sub-divisions.
Section 4. Officers
shall be elected annually at the first regular meeting held after June 30.
Section 5. The fee schedule, as set by the Board, is as follows:
(a) application fee
|
$100.00
|
(b) practical examination fees
|
|
ear mold
|
$25.00
|
audiometric
|
$25.00
|
law and rules
|
$25.00
|
(c) re-examination fee
|
same as fee for portion repeated
|
(d) internship fee
|
$100.00
|
(e) registration fee
|
$50.00
|
(f) annual license fee
|
$100.00
|
(g) late payment penalty of 10% of the annual
expiration.
|
scense fee if paid within thirty (30) days after
|
(h) license reinstatement fee annual license fee, if
the renewal is not paid
|
of one and one-half
(11/2) times the within the
thirty (30) day grace period.
|
(i) endorsement to another state
|
$20.00
|
(j) replacement or duplicate license
|
$25.00
|
(k) insufficient funds
|
$25.00
|
(I) CEU approval
|
$50.00 per CE Unit
|
Section
6. The fee set out in Section (L) of Article III (5) shall be paid
by the entity or individual requesting the approval and shall be good for
twelve (12) months from the date of notice from the board of approval or
denial.
ARTICLE IV.
Forms
All forms and other printed material necessary for the
administration of the board's duties shall be approved by a majority of the
Board.
ARTICLE V.
Application for License
Section 1.
Applications for an Arkansas hearing instrument dispenser's license or
internship must be made on forms provided by the Board. Applications submitted
on forms other than originals furnished by the Board will not be accepted by
the Board.
Section 2. Application
forms may be obtained by writing to the Board's Executive Director. The Board's
Executive Director contact information may be obtained by accessing the board's
website. A copy of the current statutory provisions and Board rules governing
the fitting and saie of hearing instruments will be provided with the
application form.
Section 3. All
application forms must be completed in full. Incomplete applications will be
returned to the applicant and shall not be considered until all information is
completed. All application forms must be accompanied by a check or money order
in the amount, and covering the fees, specified on the face of the application.
Appropriate fees shall be charged by the Board to any applicant whose check is
returned by the bank.
Section 4.
Completed applications for examination must be received by the Board through
the Executive Director no later than thirty (30) days prior to the examination.
Completed applications received or completed less than thirty (30) days before
the examination next scheduled will not be considered for that examination but
will be considered for the following examination.
Section 5. Any person furnishing false
information on any application shall be denied the right to take the
examination, or to participate in the internship program. If the applicant has
been licensed before such false information is made known to the Board, such
license shall be subject to suspension or revocation. If a person has begun the
internship program before such false information is made known to the board,
the intern is subject to expulsion from the program.
ARTICLE VI.
Internship Program
Section 1. No person shall train or supervise
an intern unless he/she has complied with the requirements of Ark. Code Ann.
Section 17-84-304.
Section 2. No
licensed hearing instrument dispenser or audiologist, qualified to act as a
sponsor of an intern, shall have more than one (1) intern in the training
program under his/her supervision at any one time.
Section 3. No intern sponsor shall knowingly
allow or require any intern under his/her supervision to practice the
dispensing of hearing instruments except under his/her direct, personal, and
physical supervision, nor knowingly allow or require such intern to work out of
any office other than his/her own.
Section
4 Each sponsor must submit, in writing, to the Board, at the time
application is submitted, an outline of the training program he/she intends to
use for each intern he/she sponsors. Such training program must be approved by
the Board prior to the issuance of any internship certificate. The Board may
prepare and distribute model training program outlines.
Section 5. At the time the internship is
completed and before the intern will be allowed to take the licensure
examination, the sponsor must submit to the Board a written report on a form
furnished by the Board and verify under oath that the intern has successfully
completed the prescribed internship program. Each sponsor must notify the Board
in writing, within ten (10) days, by certified mail, of any intern who abandons
his/her internship program before completion.
Section 6. An intern may change sponsors, for
good cause shown, with the permission of the Board.
Section 7. Any intern who abandons his/her
internship program before completion must reapply and complete a new one (1)
year internship program.
Section 8.
Any person sponsoring an intern must agree to be accountable to the Board of
Hearing Instrument Dispensers in all matters concerning the
internship.
ARTICLE VII.
Examination
Section 1. The
written portion of the licensing examination is a standardized exam
administered by the International Hearing Society (IHS). Upon approval for
license by examination, the Board will notify IHS of the applicant's
eligibility to take or retake the written exam. IHS will then notify the
applicant by email of his/her eligibility to schedule the written portion of
the exam. Applicants should not contact IHS directly before being notified of
approval to take the written exam, as eligibility and approval are determined
by the Board. IHS charges a fee for the exam, which the applicant will pay
directly to IHS upon registration for the written examination.
IHS will send examination scores to the Board, and the Board
will send a pass or fail notification to the applicant by email and regular
mail (applicants should maintain updated contact information with the Board).
The Board may follow the pass or fail recommendations set out by IHS.
Section 2. Upon passing the
written portion of the exam, the applicant is eligible to take the practical
portions of the licensing exam, which shall consist of the subject matter
contained in Ark. Code Ann. Section 17-84-305 and shall be given at least one
(1) time per year, following a regular Board meeting.
Section 3. The practical portion of the
examination will include testing of the applicant's knowledge of the provisions
of Ark. Code Ann. 17-84-101, et seq. and the Rules of the Board of Hearing
Instrument Dispensers.
Section 4.
Once the Board receives a written recommendation by the sponsor of a person
participating in a valid internship program who has successfully completed
his/her first six months of the internship program, that intern may take the
written exam. Upon passing the written portion of the exam, that intern may
take the practical portions of the licensing exam, which shall consist of the
subject matter contained in Ark. Code Ann. Section 17-84-305 and shall be given
at least one (1) time per year, following a regular Board meeting.
(a) An attempt by an intern to pass the
examination shall count against the three (3) allowed attempts to successfully
pass the licensing examination as stated in Ark. Code Ann. Section
17-84-305(d). If an intern fails any part of the exam, the intern must complete
the internship program before re-examination.
(b) An intern must work in the same physical
location as the intern's sponsor.
(c) Every audiogram and purchase order
performed by any intern must be approved, initialed, and dated by his/her
sponsor.
(d) An intern who
satisfactorily passes the licensing examination during his/her internship
program may complete the internship program under the oversight of the sponsor
without the sponsor's direct personal and physical supervision.
Section 5. An intern must repeat
the internship application and program if the intern:
(a) Fails to pass any part of the examination
within eighteen (18) months of the Board's approval of the intern's initial
internship; or
(b) Fails to pass
the exam as a whole after three (3) attempts.
Section 6. An applicant for licensure who has
not completed the internship program must reapply for licensure by examination
if the applicant fails to pass any part of the examination within one (1) year
of the board's approval of the applicant's initial application, and shall be
required, if applicable, to complete the internship program as described in ACA
17-84-304.
ARTICLE VIII.
Annual License Renewal; Inactive Status
Section 1. The annual license fee and the
information required by Article VIII (3) shall be submitted by each license
holder to the Executive Director on or before the expiration date of his/her
current license or renewal. All such licenses shall expire on June 30 each
year, unless otherwise specified by the Board, and all licenses shall be
renewed annually. Responsibility for the renewal of a license shall rest with
the license holder, and if reminders of such renewal are sent by the Executive
Director, it shall be as a courtesy only and shall not be deemed a
responsibility of the Board.
Section
2. Renewal shall be judged delinquent if either the annual license
fee or the renewal information is not postmarked before midnight of the date of
expiration.
(a) A delinquent license may be
renewed within thirty (30) days of the date of expiration by the payment of the
annual license fee, plus a penalty of ten (10%) percent of the annual license
fee, and the submission of the renewal information required by Article VIII
(3).
(b) If the renewal information
and license fee, plus penalty, is not submitted within the thirty (30) day
period following the date of expiration, the license shall be considered
revoked for nonpayment of license fees. Any license considered revoked for
non-payment of license fees, may be reinstated by the Board upon payment of the
required fee and submission of the renewal information.
(c) If the annual license fee and/or the
renewal information is delinquent by at least sixty (60) days, the licensee
shall be reexamined prior to the renewal of the license.
Section 3. Each licensee applying for renewal
of his/her license shall furnish to the Arkansas Board of Hearing Instrument
Dispensers the following:
(a) Proof of
attending, during the preceding year, a minimum of twelve (12) hours of
board-approved continuing education in the methods and techniques of testing
and fitting hearing instruments, including at least one (1) hour of ethics.
(i) All continuing education courses,
including course content and presenter's qualifications must be submitted to
the Board for pre-approval before such courses are taken by the
licensee.
(ii) Failure to receive
Board approval of continuing education hours prior to the end of the license
year shall be sufficient cause for non-renewal of the license.
(iii) Up to four (4) continuing education
hours may be earned via courses taken over the internet for any one renewal
period. Each internet course must be fully completed prior to the end of the
license year in which it is commenced. Proof of passage must be supplied in
writing at the time of renewal for the upcoming year.
(iv) The required one hour of ethics cannot
be earned through an internet course. The ethics hour must include a discussion
of the statutes and rules of the State of Arkansas pertaining to hearing
instrument dispensers and shall be presented by an Arkansas licensed
Audiologist or Arkansas licensed hearing instrument dispenser;
(b) Written evidence of annual
calibration of all audiometers and tympanometer used by the license holder to
current national standards;
(c) A
blank copy of the currently used bill of sale or comparable document provided
to patients as required by Ark. Code Ann. 17-84-104; and
(d) A statement regarding whether the
licensee is engaged in the practice of dispensing in-office assembled hearing
instruments.
Section 4.
Any hearing instrument dispenser who, because of illness or other unavoidable
circumstance, is unable to comply with the requirements for license renewal,
may make application to the Board stating the circumstances as to why he/she is
unable to so comply, and the Board, in its discretion, may relieve the
applicant from complying for such time and under such circumstances as the
Board deems proper.
Section 5.
Inactive Status. A licensee may be placed on inactive status by submitting a
written request to the Board at the time of license renewals. A licensee
electing inactive status shall pay a reduced fee of fifty (50) percent of the
current renewal fee. A licensee may resume active status by submitting a
written request to the Board, paying the full renewal fee, and following any
requirements listed in this Section.
(a) A
licensee on inactive status may not actively engage in the practice of
dispensing hearing instruments and must submit a statement acknowledging that
at the time he/she elects inactive status.
(b) Continuing Education requirements under
Article VIII Section 3(a) shall be waived for a licensee on inactive status. A
licensee who resumes active status does not need to meet the annual Continuing
Education requirements by the end of his/her first year after returning from
inactive status, but he/she must attend twelve (12) hours of Board-approved
continuing education, including one (1) hour of ethics, by the end of the
second year after returning to active status.
(c) A licensee on inactive status shall be
exempt from the requirements of Article VIII Section 3(b)-(c). A licensee
electing to return to active status must comply with those sections before
returning to active status.
(d) A
licensee on inactive status may renew their license on an annual basis at the
reduced renewal fee.
ARTICLE IX.
Standards of
Practice
Section 1. Testing. To ensure
accurate testing or screening, the maximum allowable ambient noise level shall
not exceed 55dB (A scale) wherever the testing or screening is conducted. The
ambient noise level shall be measured on the A scale with a properly calibrated
electronic sound level meter, and shall be recorded on the audiogram prior to
testing or screening. All equipment must be maintained in good working order
and be calibrated to national standards.
Section
2. All patients shall receive a battery of tests sufficient to
determine the type and degree of hearing loss, and to rule out pathologies that
require medical referral. All patients shall receive a battery of tests that
will include tympanometry, pure tone air and bone conduction, speech reception
threshold and speech discrimination with masking when indicated, and a
measurement of most comfortable listening level (MCL), and a measurement of
uncomfortable listening level (UCL).
Section
3. Fitting. All licensees shall include in their sales agreements
the terms of all licensee's warranties and/or guarantees.
Section 4. Verification. Evaluation of
objective hearing aid performance with hearing instrument(s) in place must be
done. This can be accomplished by way of "sound field" testing or "real ear
measurement", according to equipment manufacturer's specifications. The results
of the verification shall be documented and made available to the board upon
request.
Section 5. Validation. All licensees shall record
in the patient's file all patient complaints, questionnaires, tests
administered, results observed, adjustments made to the hearing instrument, and
recommendations made to the patient.
Section
6. All licensees operating an established place of business shall
maintain their records pertaining to fitting and dispensing hearing instruments
to consumers for a period of five (5) years. All such licensees shall furnish
copies of a patient's records to him or her, upon request within a reasonable
period, not to exceed thirty (30) days. A licensee may assess a reasonable
records fee not to exceed one dollar ($1.00) per page for the first five (5)
pages and twenty-five cents ($.25) for each additional page. All such licensees
who cease the active practice of dispensing hearing instruments shall make
adequate provisions for a patient to obtain copies of his or her records upon
reasonable request.
ARTICLE
X.
Unethical Conduct; Termination of Internship
Section 1 . It shall be the responsibility of
each licensee or intern to be familiar with and to avoid commission of any of
the acts regarded as unethical practices by this Act. Full responsibility for
the ethical conduct of an intern shall rest with the sponsor.
Section 2. A sponsor may terminate an intern
for unethical or dishonest conduct, or for other good cause. Within ten (10)
days the sponsor shall notify the Board of such termination by certified mail,
explaining in full the grounds for such termination.
Section 3. Any intern deprived of his/her
sponsorship by termination may request a hearing by the Board. If a majority of
the Board shall find him/her blameless of the charges, he/she shall be free to
seek sponsorship with the same or another license holder. Upon application by a
new sponsor, his/her internship may be reinstated, with no payment of fee or
penalty. If the Board shall find him/her guilty as charged, the Board, in its
discretion, may suspend or revoke the internship.
Section 4. Any licensee or intern who
violates any federal regulations regarding screening or testing for the purpose
of dispensing or selling of hearing instruments, or HIPAA regulations
concerning patient confidentiality shall be deemed in violation of Ark. Code
Ann. Section 17-84-308, and shall be subject to the penalties contained
therein.
ARTICLE XI.
Filing of Charges and Investigation
Section
1. Any person may file a written complaint with this Board against
any licensee or intern or unlicensed person in this state, charging said person
with having violated the provisions of the Board's statutes or rules.
Section 2. Any person against whom a complaint has
been filed with the Board shall be given the opportunity to respond to the
complaint in writing. The complainant shall have twenty (20) days, from the
date of receipt of the complaint, to respond.
Section 3. The Board may initiate an
investigation act upon its own motion or upon written complaint. An
investigation may be conducted by one or more of the Board members or agents of
the Board.
Section 4. If a
complaint is filed by a current board member, that board member shall not
participate in discussion or vote in any hearing that is held pursuant to the
complaint.
Section 5. If, after
investigation, the Board finds the complaint justified, further action taken by
the Board shall be governed by the Administrative Procedures Act, Ark. Code
Ann. Section 25-15-201, et. seq.
ARTICLE XII.
Established Place of
Business
Section 1. On his/her
application to the Board for a license by examination, or an internship, the
applicant shall state the following:
(a) The
applicant's name and residence address.
(b) The name of the established place of
business in which he/she conducts business.
(c) The physical location or address of that
established place of business.
(d)
The mailing address and business phone number of that established place of
business.
(e) A listing of the
equipment used in the practice of fitting and dispensing of hearing
instruments.
(f) The name and
license number of the person in charge of that established place of
business.
(g) The name and business
address, if different of the person or persons financially responsible for that
established place of business.
(h)
A statement regarding whether the applicant will be engaged in the practice of
dispensing in-office assembled hearing instruments.
Section 2. The established place of business
identified by the applicant shall be the place where the applicant's license or
certificate shall be regularly displayed and shall contain adequate equipment
and supplies for serving the needs of the public.
Section 3. A person who holds a license or
internship must notify the board by certified letter of every change in his or
her established place of business and all satellite locations within ten (10)
days of any change. Failure to give notice required in this Section shall be
deemed unethical conduct.
Section
4. At the time a license or internship is issued or approved, and
for each renewal thereof, an identification card bearing the expiration date of
the license or internship, and the name of the licensee or intern shall be
issued. Said card shall be kept in the physical possession of the licensee or
intern at all times during the performance of his/her duties. On the request of
any client or prospective client, Board member, peace officer, or any other
person and in relation to the holder's practice of fitting and dispensing
hearing instruments, he/she shall permit his/her identification card to be
inspected for the purpose of identification.
Section 5. By accepting or renewing a
license, the licensed hearing instrument dispenser grants permission for the
investigator, or other designee appointed by the board, to enter the licensee's
establishment or place of business without prior notice.
ARTICLE XIII.
Sale of Hearing
Instruments to Children
Section 1. It
shall be considered a violation of Ark. Code Ann. Section 17-84-101, et. seq.,
to fit a child under the age of eighteen (18) years of age with a hearing
instrument for the first time unless the child has had, in the past six (6)
months a medical examination by an otolaryngologist and an audiological
examination by an audiologist holding the Certificate of Clinical Competence,
and such examination indicates the need for a hearing instrument.
Section 2. No child under the age of eighteen
(18) years who has been fitted with a hearing instrument, shall be fitted with
a different hearing instrument unless a medical examination by an
otolaryngologist and an audiological examination by an audiologist holding the
Certificate of Clinical Competence has been performed within the past two (2)
years.
ARTICLE XIV.
Violation of State Hearing Instrument Law Across State Lines
Disciplinary action by a regulatory board of another state
against a person licensed by this Board, may be grounds for disciplinary action
against the person by the Arkansas Board of Hearing Instrument
Dispensers.
ARTICLE XV.
General Standards for Mobile Units
Section
1.
A licensee or intern working within a "mobile
unit" as defined by Act 373 of 2017 is required to comply with all Board
statues and rules, including, without limitation. Article IX and XIII
herein.
Section 2. A person
engaging in the practice of dispensing hearing instruments shall notify the
Board by certified mail at least thirty (30) days in advance of conducting
business as a mobile unit. The notification shall include:
(a) The dates of operation of the mobile
unit,
(b) Times of operation of the
mobile unit, and
(c) Locations of
operation of the mobile unit.
ARTICLE XVI
Licensure by
Reciprocity
Section 1. An applicant
applying for reciprocal licensure shall meet the following requirements:
(a) The applicant shall hold a substantially
similar license in another United States jurisdiction.
(1) A license from another state is
substantially similar to an Arkansas Hearing Instrument Dispenser license if
the other state's licensure qualifications require or the applicant otherwise
has obtained".
(i) Two (2) or more years of
college education from a regionally accredited college or university,
graduation from an American Conference of Audioprosthology (ACA) Program, or a
National Board for Certification in Hearing Instrument Sciences (NBCHIS)
certificate; and
(ii) Passage of
the written examination administered by the International Hearing
Society.
(2) The
applicant shall hold his or her occupational licensure in good
standing;
(3) The applicant shall
not have had a license revoked for:
(i) An
act of bad faith; or
(ii) A
violation of law, rule, or ethics;
(4) The applicant shall not hold a suspended
or probationary license in a United States jurisdiction;
(b) The applicant shall be sufficiently
competent in the field of dispensing hearing instruments; and
(c) The applicant must be at least twenty
(20) years of age.
Section
2. An applicant shall submit a fully-executed application, the
required fee, and the documentation described below.
(a) As evidence that the applicant's license
from another jurisdiction is substantially similar to Arkansas's, the applicant
shall submit the following information:
(1)
Evidence of current and active licensure in that state. The Board may verify
this information online if the jurisdiction at issue provides primary source
verification on its website or by telephone to the other state's licensing
board; and
(2) Evidence that the
other state's licensure requirements match those listed in Section 1(a)(1). The
Board may verify this information online or by telephone to the other state's
licensing board.
(b) To
demonstrate that the applicant meets the requirements in Section 1 (a)(2)-(4),
the applicant shall provide the Board with:
(1) The names of all states in which the
applicant is currently licensed or has been previously licensed; and
(2) Letters of good standing or other
information from each state in which the applicant is currently or has ever
been licensed showing that the applicant has not had his license revoked for
the reasons listed in Section 1(a)(3) and does not hold a license on suspended
or probationary status as described in Section 1 (a)(4) The Board may verify
this information online if the jurisdiction at issue provides primary source
verification on its website or by telephone to the other state's licensing
board.
(c) As evidence
that the applicant is sufficiently competent in the field of dispensing hearing
instruments, an applicant shall:
(1) Pass the
practical application examination listed in Article VII, Sections 2 and 3
and;
(2) Submit three (3) letters
of recommendation from licensed hearing instrument dispensers in the
applicant's home state attesting to the applicant's skills and
competence.
(d) The
applicant shall also provide proof of completion of the education requirements
referenced in Section 1 (a)(1)(i) by submitting a certified college transcript,
proof of graduation from an ACA program, or certification from
NBCHIS.
Section 3.
Temporary and Provisional Licenses.
(a) The
Board shall issue a temporary and provisional license immediately upon receipt
of the application, the required fee, and the documentation required under
Section 2(a)(1) and (2).
(b) The
temporary and provisional license shall be effective for ninety (90) days or
until the Board makes a decision on the application, unless the Board
determines that the applicant does not meet the requirements in Section 1 of
this rule, in which case the provisional and temporary license shall be
immediately revoked.
(c) An
applicant may provide the rest of the documentation required above in order to
receive a license, or the applicant may only provide the information necessary
for the issuance of a temporary and provisional license.
Section 4. Licensure for an Individual from a
State that Does not License Hearing Instrument Dispensers.
(a) An applicant from a state that does not
license hearing instrument dispensers shall meet the following requirements:
(1) The applicant shall be sufficiently
competent in the field of dispensing hearing instruments;
(2) The applicant shall have obtained two (2)
or more years of college education from a regionally accredited college or
university, graduation from an American Conference of Audioprosthology Program,
or a National Board for Certification in Hearing Instrument Sciences
certificate; and
(3) The applicant
must be at least twenty (20) years of age.
(b) An applicant shall submit a
fully-executed application, the required fee, and the documentation described
below:
(1) As evidence that the applicant is
sufficiently competent in the field of dispensing hearing instruments, the
applicant shall:
(i) Pass the written
examination administered by the International Hearing Society;
(ii) Pass the practical application
examination listed in Article VII, Sections 2 and 3; and
(iii) Submit three (3) letters of
recommendation from hearing instrument dispensers in the applicant's home state
attesting to the applicant's skills and competence.
(2) The applicant shall also provide proof of
completion of the education requirements referenced in Section 1 (a)(1)(i) by
submitting a certified college transcript, proof of graduation from an ACA
program, or certification from NBCHIS.
ARTICLE XVII.
Licensure for Active Duty Military, Returning Veterans, and Spouses.
Section 1. As used in this subsection
(a) "automatic licensure" means the granting
of occupational licensure without an individual's having met occupational
licensure requirements provided under Title 17 of the Arkansas Code or by these
Rules.
(b) "returning military
veteran" means a former member of the United States Armed Forces who was
discharged from active duty under circumstances other than
dishonorable.
Section 2.
The Board shall grant automatic licensure to an individual who holds a
substantially equivalent license in another U.S. jurisdiction and is:
(a) An active duty military service member
stationed in the State of Arkansas;
(b) A returning military veteran applying for
licensure within one (1) year of his or discharge from active duty;
or
(c) The spouse of a person under
Article XVII Section 2 (a) or (b).
Section 3. The Board shall grant such
automatic licensure upon receipt of all of the below:
(a) Payment of the initial licensure
fee;
(b) Evidence that the
individual holds a substantially equivalent license in another state;
and
(c) Evidence that the applicant
is a qualified applicant under Rule XVII Section 2 (a), (b), or (c).
ARTICLE XVIII.
Pre-Licensure Criminal Background Check.
Section
1. Pursuant to Act 990 of 2019, an individual may petition for a
pre-licensure determination of whether the individual's criminal record will
disqualify the individual from licensure and whether a waiver may be
obtained.
Section 2. The individual
must obtain the pre-licensure criminal background check petition form from the
Board.
Section 3. The Board will
respond with a decision in writing to a completed petition within a reasonable
time.
Section 4. The Board's
response will state the reasons for the decision.
Section 5. All decisions of the Board in
response to the petition will be determined by the information provided by the
individual.
Section 6. Any decision
made by the Board in response to a pre-licensure criminal background check
petition is not subject to appeal.
Section
7. The Board will retain a copy of the petition and response and
it will be reviewed during the formal application process.
ARTICLE XIX.
Waiver Request for
Disqualifying Criminal Offenses.
Section
1. if an individual has been convicted of an offense listed in
A.C.A. Section 17-3-102(a), except those permanently disqualifying offenses
found in subsection (e), the Board may waive disqualification of a potential
applicant or revocation of a license based on the conviction if a request for a
waiver is made by:
(a) An affected applicant
for a license; or
(b) An individual
holding a license subject to revocation.
Section 2. The Board may grant a waiver upon
consideration of the following, without limitation:
(a) The age at which the offense was
committed;
(b) The circumstances
surrounding the offense;
(c) The
length of time since the offense was committed;
(d) Subsequent work history since the offense
was committed;
(e) Employment
references since the offense was committed;
(f) Character references since the offense
was committed;
(g) Relevance of the
offense to the occupational license; and
(h) Other evidence demonstrating that
licensure of the applicant does not pose a threat to the health or safety of
the public.
Section 3. A
request for a waiver, if made by an applicant, must be in writing and accompany
the completed application and fees.
Section
4. The Board will respond with a decision in writing and will
state the reasons for the decision.
Section
5. An appeal of a determination under this section will be subject
to the Administrative Procedures Act Section 25-15-201
et
seq.