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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Begaye
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/07/07
02/16/07 HB 713/a HBIC
SHORT TITLE Counseling and Therapy Licensure Requirements
SB
ANALYST Hanika Ortiz
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
$.1 see narrative
recurring
Counseling &
Therapy
Practice Board
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Regulation & Licensing Department (RLD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HBIC Amendment
The House Business and Industry Committee Amendment makes a minor clarification regarding
language use.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 713 amends 61-9A-5 within scopes of practice; 61-9A-13 relating to licensure
requirements for Art Therapists; 61-9A-14.2 relating to licensure of Alcohol and Drug Abuse
Counselors, and enacts a new section 61-9A-14.3 relating to grandfathered licensure within the
Counseling and Therapy Practice Act.
Allows experienced and qualified Certified Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors
(CADACs), as defined in the bill, to be grandfathered into the system as Licensed
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors (LADACs) starting July 1, 2007, increasing access
for providers to Medicaid reimbursable behavioral health services in rural and tribal areas
pg_0002
House Bill 713/a HBIC – Page
2
of the state.
Expands the scope of practice of LADACs to include individuals with co-occurring
disorders relating to substance abuse and mental health. Currently, the scope of practice
of LADACs is limited to treatment only of individuals with substance abuse disorders.
The bill requires that the LADACs only provide services to individuals with a co-
occurring disorder within a multi-disciplinary team and when supervised by an
independently licensed counselor.
Restates requirements for licensure as a professional Art Therapist to include no less than
a master degree with a total of no less than forty-eight graduate semester hours or
seventy-two quarter hours in the art therapy core curriculum and has completed two years
post-graduate professional experience with three thousand client contact hours and one
hundred hours of post-graduate experience with supervision. This section of the Act is
consistent with standards of requirements for other types of counselors.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
After July 1, 2007 fees will be paid to the Licensing and Therapy Board by individuals seeking
licensure as LADACs. The current licensure, registration and renewal fees for alcohol and drug
abuse counselors is $200.
Under current Medicaid reimbursement, behavioral health services provided by LADACs are
limited to services provided to clients under age 21. The reimbursement rate is approximately
$50 per hour, with payment being made to the agency for which the LADAC works. Behavioral
health services provided by CADACs are currently not reimbursable under Medicaid.
LADAC services provided through Indian Health Service (IHS) and/or Tribal Behavioral Health
programs are reimbursed at the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) all-inclusive rate of
$242 per visit. CADACs are currently not reimbursed under the Medicaid program for services
they provide at IHS or Tribal behavioral health programs. If CADAC services were to be
provided by IHS, the payments to the facility will be 100% of federal funds through the
Medicaid Program.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
RLD reports rural and frontier communities of the state face severe shortages of behavioral
health practitioners, which continues to be a deterrent to improving behavioral health services.
Providing mechanisms to make obtaining certification or licensures less onerous for trained and
experienced behavioral health practitioners, while maintaining high standards of competency, is
part of a larger initiative to remove barriers to licensing and increase the number of behavioral
health practitioners in rural and frontier areas.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
In 2004, through Executive Order 2004-062, the Governor and Legislature committed to
behavioral health services that work towards the recovery and resiliency of children, youth and
adults with mental illness, emotional disturbance or addictive disorders. This legislation fits into
the Governor’s performance and accountability to improve behavioral health services access for
rural and tribal areas of the state.
pg_0003
House Bill 713/a HBIC – Page
3
The New Mexico Interagency Behavioral Health Collaborative, the New Mexico Counseling and
Therapy Board, the Behavioral Health Planning Counseling and its Native American
Subcommittee support passage of this bill.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
In New Mexico, CADACs are currently certified through two independent agencies: the
Albuquerque Area Inter-Tribal Council on Substance Abuse Certification Board or the New
Mexico Credentialing Board for Behavioral Health Professionals. The certification process has
for many years certified CADACs through a mandatory process that includes passing written and
oral exams that mirror the LADAC requirements. The certification process will remain
unchanged by the law.
Licensure of alcohol and drug abuse counselors will be administered under RLD over the
proposed three-year timeframe. Because the number of CADACs is relatively small, the
Department believes this will have minimal implications on staffing.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Duplicates SB 494
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
The number of LADACs will not increase with the passage of this bill, which is the intended
purpose of the legislation. Services that could be provided to individuals with substance abuse
and co-occurring disorders will not be delivered as they are needed.
AHO/mt