massage and bodywork professionals
a community of practitioners
Vermont Public Hearing Scheduled
As previously reported, ABMP recently helped develop a Sunrise Application for the state of Vermont. The sunrise process is a preliminary
assessment of the massage therapy profession conducted by the Vermont
Office of Professional Regulation (OPR) to determine whether, in its
opinion, the profession should be regulated by the state. The OPR
decision will be based purely on public safety concerns. The Sunrise
Application, developed by ABMP, the Vermont Chapter of the American
Massage Therapy Association (VT - AMTA), and others, will serve as a
guide for the OPR assessment.
The assessment includes a public hearing where anyone can comment and voice their opinion on the subject of licensing massage therapists. The
hearing has been scheduled and we encourage you to attend. If you
decide to attend the meeting, please let me know you’re coming so that I
can meet you, and we can coordinate comments among presenters and avoid
redundancy.
Date: Friday, October 29, 2010
Time: 9:00 a.m.
Location: Office of Professional Regulation, Conference Room A
National Life Building, National Life Drive
North FL2, Montpelier, VT 05620-3402
If you cannot attend, you may still submit written comments to the Office of Professional Regulation at any time before the hearing. Send written comments to Larry Novins. Please write "Massage Therapists Licensure" in the subject line.
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Sincerely,
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Views: 669
Sheryl, Peter and all,
Thank you so much for taking your time to share your thoughts and concerns. As a part to this initiative of regulating massage therapy in Vermont, I want to clearly state that there is no hidden agenda. We are simply interested in protecting the public by:
• Establishing entry-level requirements
• Defining a scope of practice so the public knows what massage therapy is (healthy, healing manipulation of soft tissue) and what is not appropriate massage therapy practice
• Providing an avenue of complaint for the consumer of massage therapy.
The need for protection exists and this has been our job to prove and present to the Office of Professional Regulation. We have done so through the Sunrise Application, and will continue this process at the Sunrise Public Hearing on October 29th in Montpelier.
On a different note, I completely agree with you both that working with insurance companies is a hassle and sometimes a burden. This initiative is not about insurance reimbursement. Please help us to avoid creating confusion around the need to regulate being based on public protection and not insurance reimbursement.
Thank you all for your energy and passion on this matter.
I am also strongly opposed to regulation in Vermont. There is no evidence that it will make things safer for Vermonter and it will greatly limit the practice and cost more money. I also think there is a hidden agenda going on. Once regulated it is hoped that [eventually] massage therapy will be covered by insurance and "certified" therapists can get reimbursement. This will be a huge mistake as many Nauturopathic Physicians have found out. The insurance companies will tell you what you can and cannnot do (what's reimburseable) and then they take forever to pay -- if at all. So initally you see a lot more clients, but no cash, and have to hire staff to deal with the insurance companies. Ultimately less working with clients and more hassles.
Sheryl Rapee-Adams said:My husband and I are ABMP members who have had a Vermont bodywork business for over a decade. We strongly oppose regulation in Vermont. We have seen no evidence that regulating massage protects public health and safety or enhances the profession of massage and bodywork.
If someone opposes prostitution, let them push for stronger enforcement of laws against it. States with massage licensing such as Florida have just as much prostitution posing as "massage" as they did before licensing. I oppose burdening massage therapists because non-massage therapists may break the law.
We will stay active to prevent yet another state from falling into the licensing trap. Massage regulation is expensive and onerous for good bodyworkers while utterly failing to prevent the problems its proponents claim it will.
Just for clarification: OPR is in the process of determining whether it is in the public interest to regulate the practice of massage therapy. The sole purpose of regulation would be public protection.
Am I right so far?
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