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and so what board(s) exists to protect the MT and our rights and needs?
there is nothing about joining a government regulating body that even remotely sounds like something i would want to do...especially as an MT!!
No boards that I am aware of--that's the role of the professional associations, AMTA and ABMP. They both have government relations reps that work their fannies off attending board meetings and trying to keep things as beneficial to the profession as possible. Our NC AMTA chair has never missed a state board meeting since Day 1 that I'm aware of.
AMTA asked me to throw my name in the hat for a board seat, and I did. My term was supposed to be three years, but our governor extended my seat and that of another member to five years so there would not be all new people coming onto the board at once. I do not intend to serve another term; I think five years is long enough for any one person to influence a board. I don't want to be the Strom Thurmond of the NC Board.
It has been an experience, one that I'm glad I've had, but it has been very stressful at times. I have previously served on the school approval committee that decides whether or not schools are up to par, and recently started serving on the license standards committee that hears appeals from applicants who have been denied a license for lack of moral character. I have also participated in numerous disciplinary hearings of therapists who have been accused of violating the code of ethics. That has been the most stressful part of it.
Someone has to do it.
Our state law requires that five of the seven people on the board be massage therapists, one a physician, and one a public member that has nothing vested in massage. I have always figured that if I object to the way something is run, the best way to do anything about it is to get on the inside and try to take positive action. I have done a lot of research for our board, and I know that I have made a positive difference.
All state boards do require that a certain number of people are MTs. My hope for every state is that good people will step up to the plate. It's not for everybody, but I have followed the actions of our board since way before I got on it, and I've always felt that we had good people who were willing to serve. I would encourage anyone who cares about how your state board is run to step up and serve for a few years.
Lisa said:and so what board(s) exists to protect the MT and our rights and needs?
there is nothing about joining a government regulating body that even remotely sounds like something i would want to do...especially as an MT!!
Yes, anyone who cares should take the opportunity at some point in their massage career to get involved.
You might be very surprised what goes on and all the hard and stressful times there are for those who commit to these projects!
I, too, have been a part in the past and participated in many changes for massage therapists! We all need to do a part.
Laura Allen said:No boards that I am aware of--that's the role of the professional associations, AMTA and ABMP. They both have government relations reps that work their fannies off attending board meetings and trying to keep things as beneficial to the profession as possible. Our NC AMTA chair has never missed a state board meeting since Day 1 that I'm aware of.
AMTA asked me to throw my name in the hat for a board seat, and I did. My term was supposed to be three years, but our governor extended my seat and that of another member to five years so there would not be all new people coming onto the board at once. I do not intend to serve another term; I think five years is long enough for any one person to influence a board. I don't want to be the Strom Thurmond of the NC Board.
It has been an experience, one that I'm glad I've had, but it has been very stressful at times. I have previously served on the school approval committee that decides whether or not schools are up to par, and recently started serving on the license standards committee that hears appeals from applicants who have been denied a license for lack of moral character. I have also participated in numerous disciplinary hearings of therapists who have been accused of violating the code of ethics. That has been the most stressful part of it.
Someone has to do it.
Our state law requires that five of the seven people on the board be massage therapists, one a physician, and one a public member that has nothing vested in massage. I have always figured that if I object to the way something is run, the best way to do anything about it is to get on the inside and try to take positive action. I have done a lot of research for our board, and I know that I have made a positive difference.
All state boards do require that a certain number of people are MTs. My hope for every state is that good people will step up to the plate. It's not for everybody, but I have followed the actions of our board since way before I got on it, and I've always felt that we had good people who were willing to serve. I would encourage anyone who cares about how your state board is run to step up and serve for a few years.
Lisa said:and so what board(s) exists to protect the MT and our rights and needs?
there is nothing about joining a government regulating body that even remotely sounds like something i would want to do...especially as an MT!!
Laura, you never disappoint! Great topic.
In looking at varous state board websites, one observation I've made is that those boards which seem to have the most influence, impact, etc., are those that are self-regulated, self-funded, etc. Do you agree? The "Advisory Board" model boards seem to get lost in the red tape, answering and having to deal with decisions made--even when they've strongly opposed them--by the Department that oversees them. It's certainly been an issue in Illinois.
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