|
80th
Texas State Legislation Update
| Janine
Ray, the TAMT Legislative chair, tirelessly corresponded and
met with many legislators throughout the session to stay abreast
of what was happening and to let the Representatives and Senators
involved know the points TAMT would and would not support.
Those points desired were: 500 hour minimum of education,
an advisory board, and less exemptions for massage establishments.
We felt if more than one massage therapist worked somewhere
on a daily basis and there was not a health care provider
of greater licensure on staff, the facility should be required
to have an establishment license. TAMT also supported the
licensing of all body workers who received compensation and
used touch for purported health benefits. |
| Two
bills, HB 1883 and HB 2957, proved controversial. While several
groups generated controversy over the inclusion of Asian Bodywork,
other touch therapies and internship hours, HB 2644 glided
through the process, with the help of the CCST’s Lobbyist
Jerry Valdez. In the meantime, HB 1883 and HB 2957 were both
left pending in the Government Reform Committee in the House
of Representatives. |
|
TAMT attempted several times to add amendments to Rep. Rose’s
bill, but were told that “they promised they would keep the
bill pure”. So when HB 2644 was recommended to the Senate’s
Local and Uncontested Calendar after the Senate Committee
on Health and Human Services unanimously agreed to the bill
(which meant it would go straight to the governor as it was
for his signature) everyone thought it was a sure thing. That
is, until the Senate sponsor, Sen. Royce West, removed it
from the Local and Uncontested Calendar and put it on the
Senate floor. At this time Senator John Carona from Dallas
attempted to attach three amendments that basically mimicked
Anchia’s bill. Two of those amendments were passed in the
Senate. |
| Due
to Rose’s previous commitment, he didn’t concur with the bill.
He sent HB2644 to a Conference Committee, and left it up to
the will of the House as to whether this bill became law. |
|
Finally HB 2644 passed the House and the Senate and is currently
waiting for the Governor’s signature or approval. What did
change during the conference committee was the effective date
of the bill. The law will take affect September 1, 2007, rather
than January 1, 2008. |
| Another
note of interest: Heather Muehr is leaving the position of
Massage Therapy Program Director for the Texas Department
of State Health Services June 1, 2007. When she realized what
had happened with the effective date of the bill, she began
compiling an Ad hoc Advisory Committee of Bodyworkers and
Massage Therapy leaders across the state to help oversee the
rule making process for the new law. |
| All
in all it looks like we received everything we wanted, that
is, if we can keep the Ad hoc Advisory committee. It may not
have happened exactly the way we wanted it to, or it wasn’t
as clean as we would have liked, but our objectives were met! |
| A
great big thank you goes out to Janine Ray. Without her, we
could not have had the presence or influence we had at the
capital. |
| Written
by Vicki Matthews, Vice President, TAMT |
| To
Our Members: |
| The
80th Texas Legislative session was both exciting and productive
for the massage therapy profession. House Bill 2644 passed
and can be summarized into the following points: |
| 1.
Licensing for all client contact therapies with purported
health benefits. (NEW) |
| 2.
Stronger establishment licensing. Most of the old exemptions
are gone; only licensed healthcare professionals and licensed
cosmetologists are exempt. |
| 3.
500 Hour minimum: 200 hours dedicated to the study of massage
therapy techniques/theory and the practice of manipulation
of soft tissue, with 125 hrs. dedicated to Swedish technique,
75 hours undefined (NEW). |
- 50
hours for Anatomy
-
25 hours for Physiology
-
50 hours for Kinesiology (NEW)
-
40 hours for Pathology (NEW)
-
45 Hours for Business/Law/Rules/Ethics (ADDS 30 hours)
-
20 hours for Health, Hygiene, First Aid, Universal Precautions,
and CPR
|
| 4.
No changes for internship. |
|
5. Defines an establishment “Operator” and “Owner”. |
|
6. Practical portion of the State Boards is gone. |
| 7.
The courts will now have a much stronger legal case to prosecute
unlicensed therapists or Bodyworkers, or unethical practices. |
| 8. Massage therapists
with current licenses in Texas are grandfathered in under
this law. |
| It
began with three bills, all three including a change to a
required minimum of 500 hours for the basic massage program:
|
|
HB1883 |
|
Rafael Anchia, the Representative from Dallas, submitted HB
1883. Though this bill began as an attempt to control prostitution
under the heading of Asian Spas, it turned into an effort
to write a law that would bring Texas up to National Standards.
Because of problems in his district, his additional intent
was to license all body workers and tighten up exemptions
for establishments. After hearing concerns from TAMT, he agreed
to limit internship hours for basic programs, change the examination
process to “a state approved exam”, and incorporate an advisory
board for massage therapists. Rep. Anchia’s office spent two
years diligently investigating the needs of the profession.
He and his staff met with numerous body workers, school owners,
associations and government officials to write a bill that
incorporated the concerns of all the stakeholders of the profession;
while still accomplishing his major objective: the prosecution
of prostitution rings and prostitutes using bodywork as a
cover. |
| HB2957 |
| The
Texas Association of Massage School Owners (TAMSO) wrote the
proposal for HB 2957 and Representative Jim Jackson from Carrollton
authored the bill. Ex -Texas Representative Susannah Hupp
was the TAMSO’s lobbyist. This bill exempted energy work and
Asian body work from massage therapy law and allowed for up
to 80% of a basic massage program to be internship. The private
school owners realized that title IV funding would be available
with the new educational requirements, and they wanted to
use more internship hours to offer fee waivers to students
who could not afford the tuition. Also Rep. Rose’s staff reported
that some TAMSO members also expressed a religious conflict
with certain types of bodywork being included in the massage
therapy law. |
| HB2644 |
| The
Career Colleges and Schools of Texas (CCST), an association
representing member trade schools in the state, wrote the
proposal for HB 2644 and Representative Patrick Rose from
Austin authored the bill. This bill only raised the standards
for basic massage education to a minimum of 500 hours and
included a January 1, 2008 deadline. |
| After
polling the membership and looking over the three bills, the
TAMT board, decided to support HB 1883. |
Here
are the links to the three massage bills as they are listed on
Texas Legislature On-line:
HB
2644 New Massage Law additions
HB
1883
HB
2957
Warning
-- SCAM artists targeting LMTs, Yoga Instructors, Musicians!
Here's
a sample of the latest variation on the Nigerian Scam -- for LMTS
and other small business providers. This recently expanded to
small music groups performing at weddings, etc.
From:
(ITALIAN-SOUNDING NAME) [mailto:(MTsoundingbiz@libero.it]
Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2007 8:28 AM
Subject: Massage Therapist needed Asap... |
|
Hello,
How
are you today? My name is Mrs (ITALIAN-SOUNDING NAME) ,
I live and work here in italy, i am 36yrs old. I have been
doing massage since 1989.I do a deep relaxation massage
in which the muscles relax without pain. I also do energy
massage that helps people feel great when I am done. I am
certified to do pregnancy massage. I have lots of happy
clients here in italy.
|
| I
have a client Mr. (Another Italian Name) A model here in italy.
he will be coming to the U.S in three weeks time for a modeling
job and he will be residing in Texas temporarily until the
neccesary arrangement for his job has been made before he
leaves, I have checked with my fellow Massage therapist here
in italy if they can refer me to any good Massage therapist
in your Area but none of them could give me a referral. |
| Yesterday
i met with an old friend, his name is (Mr. Somebody Smith)
who gave me your name and your email address, He said you
are a very good Massage therapist he said you worked on him
when he came on vacation with his family to Texas two yrs
ago. He said i should contact you that he is sure you will
be able to give my client a good bodywork and relaxation massage. |
| Pls
let me know where your office is located so that i would know
if he will need transportaion to get to your office or your
house. He will be needing bodywork and relaxation massage
of 60 min session 3days per week for One Month . Mr.(Another
Italian Name) asked me to come with him to the US but i told
him i would not be able to go with him to the US as i have
a course i will be going for in a week time. So i promised
to help him get a good massage therapist in your Area. Pls
tell me a little more about your self, how long have you been
doing massage? and can you give him good bodywork and relaxation
massage? |
|
Pls i need you to get back to me with the amount you charge
per Hr and also let me know if he can pay you via Cashiers
Check? |
|
Pls send your reply to my personal email address ( NameLMTish@yahoo.it
) because i dont really check this email box always. |
|
Thank
you very much and do have a nice day..
ITALIAN-SOUNDING
NAME
For:Healing hands S.p.a
Foro Buonaparte, 31
20121 Milano, Italy
NameLMTish@yahoo.it
|
| Never,
EVER give out your personal or bank info, like routing and
account numbers for a direct deposit. Your own bank or PayPal
has this information -- contact them the USUAL way you contact
them, if you want to double-check whether a scam is real.
Do NOT click on any link in the suspicious email. Remember
-- these people are professional thieves, they can do a pretty
good job of making a web page look real. Go to your own, regular
link to your bank or PayPal site. |
| Some
ways to recognize these scams: |
| 1.)
Google the address. For example, this is the address to Edison
SpA, the Italian power company, at their physics lab in Milan.
|
| 2.)
Is the address you were contacted at one you don't use very
often -- like one you gave to DSHS, that could be picked up
by someone researching on-line? |
| 3.)
Is the "Contact" a lie -- someone your files show
no record of, a name that is very common? |
|
4.)
Do they want you send you a Traveler's or Cashier's Check
-- and then have you deposit money from YOUR account into
their account?
If they send you a cashier's check even if you don't
ask for them to, or if it arrives out of the blue, wait
-- they'll contact you. And you simply tell them you will
not cash it, and ask for an address to mail the cashier's
check back to them. If you must deal with them, tell them
you never take money in advance, and stick to your story.
Don't waste time and energy discussing this with them. They
are professionals -- they have gotten thousands from other
therapists who were trying to be nice and arrange a package
of sessions for someone from out of the country.
After you say you won't give them any money, if they won't
get you an address for the return of the check, contact
your local DA and see if they will accept the check.
|
| 5.)
Watch for a set time frame, such as "I need your services
at least one hour per session 2 times per week for at least
4 weeks." Sounds like a prescription -- and how frequently
do clients ask you for bodywork using that phrasing? |
| 6.)
They don't ask you for your "rates" they ask about
your "hourly rate" and try to negotiate high $$
packages. |
| 7.)
Watch for bad spelling, typing, and grammar. These thieves
try to make you think that they are professionals, that they
are banks, etc. You will often find big errors in these letters
that even a 12 year old in America would know was wrong. Watch
for weird information, such as -- would you tell another professional
you did not know how old you were in a "cold contact"
such as an e-mail? |
| Unfortunately,
this is so widespread and the victims so isolated, there's
not a lot that can be done about this swindle. (A TAMT member
reported that in her other profession, Internet fraud had
to reach over $100,000 before the FBI would help. The FBI
simply doesn't have enough people to keep track of fraud below
a certain $$ amount.) |
|
Here's
a link to a press release warning about cases like this
in California.
|
Do
you have other suggested information about scams against LMTs? Let
us know about them!
National Center
for Education Statistics definitions
of all the professions under massage therapy, Asian and somatic
bodywork.
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