SESSION OF
2001
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON
HOUSE BILL NO. 2275
As Amended by Senate Committee on
Public Health and
Welfare
Brief
(1)
As amended by Senate Committee, HB
2275 transfers the responsibilities of the State Board of
Cosmetology to the Secretary of Health and Environment; abolishes
the existing Board of Cosmetology and creates an Advisory Board on
Cosmetology to advise the Secretary; and amends the acts that are
administered currently by the Board of Cosmetology to reflect the
transfer of administrative responsibility. The bill makes no policy
changes in the act that concerns the licensing and regulation of
the practices of cosmetology, nail technology, esthetics, and
electrology and the schools that teach such practices. Amendments
to such act reflect only the transfer of responsibility for
administration of the act and the deletion of outdated references.
The Senate amendments to the act that concern the licensing and
regulation of tanning facilities make no policy changes other than
the transfer of administrative responsibility. Amendments to the
act that concern the licensing and regulation of persons who engage
in tattooing, body piercing, or color technology not only reflect
the change in administrative responsibility, but also policy
changes as noted below.
Sections 1 through 17 of HB 2275
concern only persons licensed to practice tattooing, body piercing,
and permanent color technology and make the following policy
changes in the laws governing such practices.
- •The definition of body
piercing is changed to limit the puncturing of the skin for the
purpose of inserting only removable jewelry or other
objects. The bill further limits the practice by adding language
that states the law is not to be construed to authorize a licensed
body piercer to implant or embed foreign objects into the human
body or otherwise engage in the practice of medicine and
surgery.
- •For the purposes of body
piercing, permanent color technology, and tattooing, the term
"facility" is defined to include a place where any of the body arts
is practiced.
- •The law is amended to make
it a violation of the act to operate a place in which any of the
three regulated occupations is practiced unless the operator of
such place has a facility license.
- •A new violation of the act
is created by adding the knowing employment of an unlicensed person
to engage in body piercing, tattooing, or permanent color
technology.
- •Amendments make it a class A
nonperson misdemeanor to engage in any of the above activities;
authorize the Secretary to bring an action to enjoin any person
from practicing color technology, tattooing, or body piercing or
operating a facility without having a valid license; authorize the
Secretary to order the remedy of any violation of rules and
regulations; and authorize the Secretary to issue cease and desist
orders on determining a licensee has violated an order, any rules
and regulations, or any provision of the act that concerns body
piercing, permanent color technology, and tattooing.
- •A new criminal penalty
applicable to acts set out in KSA 65-1942 is created by HB 2275.
Commission of the acts prohibited by the statute would constitute a
class A nonperson misdemeanor.
- •A new statute created by the
bill establishes a new license category, i.e., a trainer
license and, for the first time, requires that any person who
teaches or trains others to tattoo, body pierce, or practice
permanent color technology have a trainer's license.
- •New requirements for an
apprentice license are established. The new license is required for
anyone who desires to practice one of the regulated occupations
while completing a training program.
- •A new provision would allow
Kansas licensing of persons licensed in another jurisdiction who
meet the conditions set out in the bill.
- •The bill requires that
mobile facilities be licensed by the Secretary; that all places for
which a facility license is requested be inspected prior to
licensure; and provides for reinspection of facilities in
accordance with a schedule determined by rules and
regulations.
- •A new provision of law
created by HB 2275 allows an expired license to be renewed within
six months of the expiration date on payment of a renewal fee and a
delinquent renewal fee.
- •A new provision of law would
authorize a temporary license for persons who desire to engage in
one of the regulated occupations for no more than 15 continuous
days as well as a temporary facility license.
- •The time client records must
be retained is changed from five to three years.
- •New fees are authorized for
apprentice, temporary, facility, and trainer's licenses and for
application and renewal fees for trainer's licenses.
- •New language allows the
assessment of investigation and hearing costs against unlicensed
persons in proceedings in which the Secretary is the successful
party.
- •The Secretary is allowed to
limit or condition a license or license renewal and to censure a
licensee. New grounds for which an action may be brought against a
licensee to deny, revoke, or suspend a license are
created.
- •The criminal penalty for
performing body piercing or tattooing on persons under 18 years of
age without the prior written and notarized consent of a parent or
court-appointed guardian is increased from a class C to a class A
misdemeanor.
HB 2275 creates a new seven-member
Advisory Board on Cosmetology. Members are to be appointed by the
Governor in accordance with the provisions set out in the bill.
Appointments are to be for three-year, staggered terms. The
Advisory Council is to advise the Secretary of Health and
Environment on the administration of Article 19 of Chapter 65 (the
acts that relate to cosmetology, tanning salons, and body piercing,
tattooing and permanent color technology).
The Secretary of Health and
Environment is given authority to contract for carrying out
inspections and other responsibilities under the acts amended by HB
2275.
Background
HB 2275 was requested by the Board
of Cosmetology whose representative explained the bill was intended
to make technical and cleanup changes in the laws governing the
practices of tattooing, permanent color technology, and body
piercing as well as making other changes the Board considered
necessary based on four years of experience with the regulation of
such occupations.
Under the amendments proposed by
the Senate Committee the activities of the Secretary of Health and
Environment relating to the administration of Article 19 of Chapter
65 would continue to be funded by fees.
1. *Supplemental
notes are prepared by the Legislative Research Department and do
not express legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal
note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/fulltext.cgi