Kansas 2025-2026 Regular Session

Kansas House Bill HB2219 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/03/2025

                            Session of 2025
HOUSE BILL No. 2219
By Committee on Health and Human Services
Requested by Representative Buehler on behalf of the Kansas Chamber of 
Commerce
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AN ACT concerning the healing arts; relating to physician assistants; 
enacting the physician assistant licensure compact to provide interstate 
practice privileges.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Kansas:
Section 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the physician 
assistant licensure compact.
SECTION 1—PURPOSE
In order to strengthen access to medical services and in recognition of 
the advances in the delivery of medical services, the participating states of 
the PA licensure compact have allied in common purpose to develop a 
comprehensive process that complements the existing authority of state 
licensing boards to license and discipline PAs and seeks to enhance the 
portability of a license to practice as a PA while safeguarding the safety of 
patients. This compact allows medical services to be provided by PAs, via 
the mutual recognition of the licensee's qualifying license by other 
compact-participating states. This compact also adopts the prevailing 
standard for PA licensure and affirms that the practice and delivery of 
medical services by the PA occurs where the patient is located at the time 
of the patient encounter and, therefore, requires the PA to be under the 
jurisdiction of the state licensing board where the patient is located. State 
licensing boards that participate in this compact retain the jurisdiction to 
impose adverse action against a compact privilege in that state issued to a 
PA through the procedures of this compact. The PA licensure compact will 
alleviate burdens for military families by allowing active duty military 
personnel and their spouses to obtain a compact privilege based on having 
an unrestricted license in good standing from a participating state.  
SECTION 2—DEFINITIONS
As used in this compact:
(a) "Adverse action" means any administrative, civil, equitable or 
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criminal action permitted by a state's laws that is imposed by a licensing 
board or other authority against a PA license, application for licensure or 
compact privilege such as license denial, censure, revocation, suspension, 
probation, monitoring of the licensee or restriction on the licensee's 
practice.
(b) "Compact privilege" means the authorization granted by a remote 
state to allow a licensee from another participating state to practice as a PA 
to provide medical services and other licensed activity to a patient located 
in the remote state under the remote state's laws and regulations.
(c) "Conviction" means a finding by a court that an individual is 
guilty of a felony or misdemeanor offense through adjudication or entry of 
a guilty plea or no contest to the charge by the offender.
(d) "Criminal background check" means the submission of 
fingerprints or other biometric-based information for an applicant for 
licensure for the purpose of obtaining that applicant's criminal history 
record information, as defined in 28 C.F.R. § 20.3(d), from the state's 
criminal history record repository as defined in 28 C.F.R. § 20.3(f).
(e) "Data system" means the repository of information concerning 
licensees, including, but not limited to, license status and adverse actions, 
that is created and administered under the terms of this compact.
(f) "Executive committee" means a group of directors and ex officio 
individuals elected or appointed pursuant to section 7(f)(2).
(g) "Impaired practitioner" means a PA whose practice is adversely 
affected by a health-related condition that impacts such PA's ability to 
practice.
(h) "Investigative information" means information, records or 
documents received or generated by a licensing board pursuant to an 
investigation.
(i) "Jurisprudence requirement" means the assessment of an 
individual's knowledge of the laws and rules governing the practice of a 
PA in a state.
(j) "License" means current authorization by a state, other than 
authorization pursuant to a compact privilege, for a PA to provide medical 
services that would be unlawful without current authorization.
(k) "Licensee" means an individual who holds a license from a state 
to provide medical services as a PA.
(l) "Licensing board" means any state entity authorized to license and 
otherwise regulate PAs.
(m) "Medical services" means healthcare services provided for the 
diagnosis, prevention, treatment, cure or relief of a health condition, injury 
or disease, as defined by a state's laws and regulations.
(n) "Model compact" means the model for the PA licensure compact 
on file with the council of state governments or other entity as designated 
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by the commission.
(o) "PA" means an individual who is licensed as a physician assistant 
in a state. For purposes of this compact, any other title or status adopted by 
a state to replace the term "physician assistant" shall be deemed 
synonymous with "physician assistant" and shall confer the same rights 
and responsibilities to the licensee under the provisions of this compact at 
the time of its enactment.
(p) "PA licensure compact commission," "compact commission" or 
"commission" means the national administrative body created pursuant to 
section 7(a).
(q) "Participating state" means a state that has enacted this compact.
(r) "Qualifying license" means an unrestricted license issued by a 
participating state to provide medical services as a PA.
(s) "Remote state" means a participating state where a licensee who is 
not licensed as a PA is exercising or seeking to exercise the compact 
privilege.
(t) "Rule" means any rule or regulation adopted by an entity that has 
the force and effect of law.
(u) "Significant investigative information" means investigative 
information that a licensing board, after an inquiry or investigation that 
includes notification and an opportunity for the PA to respond if required 
by state law, has reason to believe is not groundless and, if proven true, 
would indicate more than a minor infraction.
(v) "State" means any state, commonwealth, district or territory of the 
United States.
  SECTION 3—STATE PARTICIPATION IN THIS COMPACT
(a) To participate in this compact, a participating state shall:
(1) License PAs;
(2) participate in the compact commission's data system;
(3) have a mechanism in place for receiving and investigating 
complaints against licensees and applicants for licensure;
(4) notify the commission, in compliance with the terms of this 
compact and commission rules, of any adverse action against a licensee or 
applicant for licensure and the existence of significant investigative 
information regarding a licensee or applicant for licensure;
(5) fully implement a criminal background check requirement, within 
a time frame established by commission rule, examination the results of a 
criminal background check and reporting to the commission whether the 
applicant for licensure has been granted a license;
(6) comply with the rules of the compact commission; 
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(7) utilize passage of a recognized national examination such as the 
NCCPA PANCE as a requirement for PA licensure; and
(8) grant the compact privilege to a holder of a qualifying license in a 
participating state.
(b) Nothing in this compact shall be construed to prohibit a 
participating state from charging a fee for granting the compact privilege.
SECTION 4—COMPACT PRIVILEGE
(a) To exercise the compact privilege, a licensee shall:
(1) Have graduated from a PA program accredited by the 
accreditation review commission on education for the physician assistant, 
inc., or other programs authorized by commission rule;
(2) hold current NCCPA certification;
(3) have no felony or misdemeanor convictions;
(4) have never had a controlled substance license, permit or 
registration suspended or revoked by a state or by the United States drug 
enforcement administration;
(5) have a unique identifier as determined by commission rule;
(6) hold a qualifying license;
(7) have had no revocation of a license or limitation or restriction on 
any license currently held due to an adverse action;
(A) if a licensee has had a limitation or restriction on a license or 
compact privilege due to an adverse action, two years shall have elapsed 
from the date on which the license or compact privilege is no longer 
limited or restricted due to the adverse action;
(B) if a compact privilege has been revoked or is limited or restricted 
in a participating state for conduct that would not be a basis for 
disciplinary action in a participating state in which the licensee is 
practicing or applying to practice under a compact privilege, that 
participating state shall have the discretion not to consider such action as 
an adverse action requiring the denial or removal of a compact privilege in 
that state; 
(8) notify the compact commission that the licensee is seeking the 
compact privilege in a remote state;
(9) meet any jurisprudence requirement of a remote state in which the 
licensee is seeking to practice under the compact privilege and pay any 
fees applicable to satisfying the jurisprudence requirement; and
(10) report to the commission any adverse action taken by a 
nonparticipating state within 30 days after such adverse action is taken.
(b) The compact privilege shall be valid until the expiration or 
revocation of the qualifying license unless terminated pursuant to an 
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adverse action. The licensee shall comply with the requirements of 
subsection (a) to maintain the compact privilege in a remote state. If the 
participating state takes adverse action against a qualifying license, the 
licensee shall lose the compact privilege in any remote state in which the 
licensee has a compact privilege until the licensee meets the following 
conditions:
(1) The license is no longer limited or restricted; and
(2) two years have elapsed from the date on which the license is no 
longer limited or restricted due to the adverse action.
(c) Once a restricted or limited license satisfies the requirements of 
subsection (b), the licensee shall meet the requirements of subsection (a) to 
obtain a compact privilege in any remote state.
(d) For each remote state in which a PA seeks authority to prescribe 
controlled substances, the PA shall satisfy all the requirements imposed by 
such state in granting or renewing such authority.
SECTION 5—DESIGNATION OF THE STATE FROM WHICH THE 
LICENSEE IS APPLYING FOR A COMPACT PRIVILEGE
Upon a licensee's application for a compact privilege, the licensee shall 
identify to the commission the participating state from which the licensee 
is applying, in accordance with applicable rules adopted by the 
commission and subject to the following requirements:
(a) When applying for a compact privilege, the licensee shall provide 
the commission with the address of the licensee's primary residence and, 
thereafter, shall immediately report to the commission any change in the 
address of the licensee's primary residence; and
(b) when applying for a compact privilege, the licensee is required to 
consent to accept service of process by mail at the licensee's primary 
residence on file with the commission with respect to any action brought 
against the licensee by the commission or a participating state, including a 
subpoena, with respect to any action brought or investigation conducted by 
the commission or a participating state. 
SECTION 6—ADVERSE ACTIONS
(a) A participating state in which a licensee is licensed shall have 
exclusive power to impose adverse action against the qualifying license 
issued by that participating state.
(b) In addition to the other powers conferred by state law, a remote 
state shall have the authority, in accordance with existing state due process 
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law, to:
(1) Take adverse action against a PA's compact privilege within that 
state to remove a licensee's compact privilege or take other action 
necessary under applicable law to protect the health and safety of its 
citizens; and
(2) issue subpoenas for both hearings and investigations that require 
the attendance and testimony of witnesses as well as the production of 
evidence. Subpoenas issued by a licensing board in a participating state for 
the attendance and testimony of witnesses or the production of evidence 
from another participating state shall be enforced in the latter state by any 
court of competent jurisdiction, according to the practice and procedure of 
such court applicable to subpoenas issued in proceedings pending before 
it. The issuing authority shall pay any witness fees, travel expenses, 
mileage and other fees required by the service statutes of the state in which 
the witnesses or evidence is located.
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (b)(2), subpoenas shall not be issued 
by a participating state to gather evidence of conduct in another state that 
is lawful in such other state for the purpose of taking adverse action 
against a licensee's compact privilege or application for a compact 
privilege in the participating state.
(d) Nothing in this compact shall be deemed to authorize a 
participating state to impose discipline against a PA's compact privilege or 
to deny an application for a compact privilege in that participating state for 
the individual's otherwise lawful practice in another state.
(e) For purposes of taking adverse action, the participating state that 
issued the qualifying license shall give the same priority and effect to 
reported conduct received from any other participating state as it would if 
the conduct had occurred within the participating state that issued the 
qualifying license. The participating state shall apply its own state laws to 
determine appropriate action.
(f) A participating state, if otherwise permitted by state law, may 
recover from the affected PA the costs of investigations and disposition of 
cases resulting from any adverse action taken against that PA.
(g) A participating state may take adverse action based on the factual 
findings of a remote state if the participating state follows its own 
procedures for taking the adverse action.
(h) Joint investigations.
(1) In addition to the authority granted to a participating state by such 
state's PA laws and regulations or other applicable state law, any 
participating state may participate with other participating states in joint 
investigations of licensees.
(2) Participating states shall share any investigative, litigation or 
compliance materials in furtherance of any joint or individual investigation 
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initiated under this compact.
(i) If an adverse action is taken against a PA's qualifying license, the 
PA's compact privilege in all remote states shall be deactivated until two 
years have elapsed after all restrictions have been removed from the state 
license. All disciplinary orders by the participating state that issued the 
qualifying license that impose adverse action against a PA's license shall 
include a statement that the PA's compact privilege is deactivated in all 
participating states during the pendency of the order.
(j) If any participating state takes adverse action, it promptly shall 
notify the administrator of the data system. 
SECTION 7—ESTABLISHMENT OF THE PA LICENSURE COMPACT 
COMMISSION
(a) The participating states hereby create and establish a joint 
government agency and national administrative body known as the PA 
licensure compact commission. The commission is an instrumentality of 
the compact states acting jointly and not an instrumentality of any one 
state. The commission shall come into existence on or after the effective 
date of the compact as set forth in section 11(a).
(b) Membership, voting and meetings.
(1) Each participating state shall have and be limited to one delegate 
selected by such participating state's licensing board or, if such 
participating state has more than one licensing board, selected collectively 
by the participating state's licensing boards.
(2) A delegate shall be either:
(A) A current PA, physician or public member of a licensing board or 
PA council or committee; or
(B) an administrator of a licensing board.
(3) Any delegate may be removed or suspended from office as 
provided by the laws of the state from which the delegate is appointed.
(4) The participating state licensing board shall fill any vacancy 
occurring in the commission within 60 days.
(5) Each delegate shall be entitled to one vote on all matters voted on 
by the commission and shall otherwise have an opportunity to participate 
in the commission's business and affairs. A delegate shall vote in person or 
by such other means as provided in the bylaws. The bylaws may provide 
for delegates' participation in meetings by telecommunications, video 
conference or other means of communication.
(6) The commission shall meet at least once during each calendar 
year. Additional meetings shall be held as set forth in this compact and the 
bylaws.
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(7) The commission shall establish by rule a term of office for 
delegates.
(c) The commission shall have the following powers and duties:
(1) Establish a code of ethics for the commission;
(2) establish the fiscal year of the commission;
(3) establish fees;
(4) establish bylaws;
(5) maintain its financial records in accordance with the bylaws;
(6) meet and take such actions as are consistent with the provisions of 
this compact and the bylaws;
(7) adopt rules to facilitate and coordinate implementation and 
administration of this compact, and such rules shall have the force and 
effect of law and shall be binding in all participating states;
(8) bring and prosecute legal proceedings or actions in the name of 
the commission, except that the standing of any state licensing board to 
sue or be sued under applicable law shall not be affected;
(9) purchase and maintain insurance and bonds;
(10) borrow, accept or contract for services of personnel, including, 
but not limited to, employees of a participating state;
(11) hire employees and engage contractors, elect or appoint officers, 
fix compensation, define duties, grant such individuals appropriate 
authority to carry out the purposes of this compact and establish the 
commission's personnel policies and programs relating to conflicts of 
interest, qualifications of personnel and other related personnel matters;
(12) accept any and all appropriate donations and grants of money, 
equipment, supplies, materials and services and receive, utilize and 
dispose of the same. At all times the commission shall avoid any 
appearance of impropriety or conflict of interest;
(13) lease, purchase, accept appropriate gifts or donations of or 
otherwise own, hold, improve or use any property real, personal or mixed. 
In performing these actions, the commission shall avoid the appearance of 
impropriety at all times;
(14) sell, convey, mortgage, pledge, lease, exchange, abandon or 
otherwise dispose of any property real, personal or mixed;
(15) establish a budget and make expenditures;
(16) borrow money;
(17) appoint committees, including standing committees composed of 
members, state regulators, state legislators or their representatives, 
consumer representatives and such other interested persons as may be 
designated in this compact and the bylaws;
(18) provide and receive information from, and cooperate with, law 
enforcement agencies;
(19) elect a chairperson, vice chairperson, secretary and treasurer and 
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such other officers of the commission as provided in the commission's 
bylaws;
(20) reserve for itself, in addition to those reserved exclusively to the 
commission under the compact, powers that the executive committee shall 
not exercise;
(21) approve or disapprove a state's participation in the compact 
based upon its determination as to whether the state's compact legislation 
materially departs from the model compact language;
(22) prepare and provide to the participating states an annual report; 
and
(23) perform such other functions as may be necessary or appropriate 
to achieve the purposes of this compact, consistent with the state 
regulation of PA licensure and practice.
(d) Meetings of the commission.
(1) All meetings of the commission that are not closed pursuant to 
this subsection shall be open to the public. Notice of public meetings shall 
be posted on the commission's website at least 30 days prior to the public 
meeting.
(2) Notwithstanding subsection (d)(1), the commission may convene 
a public meeting by providing at least 24 hours' prior notice on the 
commission's website and any other means as provided in the 
commission's rules for any of the reasons it may dispense, with notice of 
proposed rulemaking under section 9(l).
(3) The commission may convene in a closed, nonpublic meeting or 
nonpublic part of a public meeting to receive legal advice or to discuss:
(A) Noncompliance of a participating state with its obligations under 
this compact;
(B) the employment, compensation, discipline or other matters, 
practices or  procedures related to specific employees or other matters 
related to the commission's internal personnel practices and procedures;
(C) any current, threatened or reasonably anticipated litigation;
(D) the negotiation of contracts for the purchase, lease or sale of 
goods, services or real estate;
(E) the accusation of any individual of a crime or the formal censure 
any individual;
(F) the disclosure of trade secrets or commercial or financial 
information that is privileged or confidential;
(G) the disclosure of information of a personal nature, if disclosure 
would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy;
(H) the disclosure of investigative records compiled for law 
enforcement purposes;
(I) the disclosure of information related to any investigative reports 
prepared by or on behalf of or for use of the commission or other 
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committee charged with the responsibility of investigation or 
determination of compliance issues pursuant to this compact;
(J) legal advice; or
(K) any matters specifically exempted from disclosure by federal or a 
participating state's statutes.
(4) If a meeting, or portion of a meeting, is closed pursuant to 
subsection (d)(3), the chairperson of the meeting or the chairperson's 
designee shall certify that the meeting or portion of the meeting may be 
closed and shall reference each relevant exempting provision.
(5) The commission shall keep minutes that fully and clearly describe 
all matters discussed in a meeting and shall provide a full and accurate 
summary of actions taken, including a description of the views expressed. 
All documents considered in connection with an action shall be identified 
in such minutes. All minutes and documents of a closed meeting shall 
remain under seal, subject to release by a majority vote of the commission 
or order of a court of competent jurisdiction.
(e) Financing of the commission.
(1) The commission shall pay, or provide for the payment of, the 
reasonable expenses of its establishment, organization and ongoing 
activities.
(2) The commission may accept any and all appropriate revenue 
sources, donations and grants of money, equipment, supplies, materials 
and services.
(3) The commission may levy on and collect an annual assessment 
from each participating state and may impose compact privilege fees on 
licensees of participating states to which a compact privilege is granted to 
cover the cost of the operations and activities of the commission and its 
staff. Such assessment shall be in a total amount sufficient to cover the 
commission's annual budget as approved by the commission each year for 
which revenue is not provided by other sources. The aggregate annual 
assessment amount levied on participating states shall be allocated based 
upon a formula to be determined by commission rule. Compact privileges 
and such contract privilege's associated fees shall be governed as follows:
(A) A compact privilege expires when the licensee's qualifying 
license in the participating state from which the licensee applied for the 
compact privilege expires; and
(B) if the licensee terminates the qualifying license through which the 
licensee applied for the compact privilege before its scheduled expiration 
and the licensee has a qualifying license in another participating state, the 
licensee shall inform the commission that it is changing to that 
participating state through which it applies for a compact privilege to that 
participating state and pay to the commission any compact privilege fee 
required by commission rule. 
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(4) The commission shall not incur obligations of any kind prior to 
securing the funds adequate to meet such obligations, nor shall the 
commission pledge the credit of any of the participating states, except by 
and with the authority of the participating state.
(5) The commission shall keep accurate accounts of all receipts and 
disbursements. The receipts and disbursements of the commission shall be 
subject to the financial review and accounting procedures established 
under its bylaws. All receipts and disbursements of funds handled by the 
commission shall be subject to an annual financial review by a certified or 
licensed public accountant, and the report of the financial review shall be 
included in and become part of the annual report of the commission.
(f) The executive committee.
(1) The executive committee shall have to power to act on behalf of 
the commission according to the terms of this compact and commission 
rules.
(2) The executive committee shall be composed of nine members 
described as follows:
(A) Seven voting members who are elected by the commission from 
the current membership of the commission;
(B)(i)(a) one ex officio, nonvoting member from a recognized 
national PA professional association; and
(b) one ex officio, nonvoting member from a recognized national PA 
certification organization.
(ii) The ex officio members shall be selected by their respective 
organizations.
(3) The commission may remove any member of the executive 
committee as provided in its bylaws.
(4) The executive committee shall meet at least annually.
(5) The executive committee shall have the following duties and 
responsibilities:
(A) Recommend to the commission changes to the commission's 
rules or bylaws, changes to this compact legislation, fees to be paid by 
compact-participating states such as annual dues and any commission 
compact fee charged to licensees for the compact privilege;
(B) ensure that compact administration services are appropriately 
provided, whether
contractual or otherwise;
(C) prepare and recommend the budget;
(D) maintain financial records on behalf of the commission;
(E) monitor compact compliance of participating states and provide 
compliance reports to the commission;
(F) establish additional committees as necessary;
(G) exercise the powers and duties of the commission during the 
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interim between commission meetings, except for issuing proposed 
rulemaking or adopting commission rules or bylaws or exercising any 
other powers and duties exclusively reserved to the commission by the 
commission's rules; and
(H) perform other duties as provided in the commission's rules or 
bylaws.
(6) All meetings of the executive committee at which it votes or plans 
to vote on matters in exercising the powers and duties of the commission 
shall be open to the public and public notice of such meetings shall be 
given as public meetings of the commission are given.
(7) The executive committee may convene in a closed, nonpublic 
meeting for the same reasons that the commission may convene in a 
nonpublic meeting as set forth in subsection (d)(3), and shall announce the 
closed meeting as the commission is required to do under subsection (d)(4) 
and keep minutes of the closed meeting as the commission is required to 
do under subsection (d)(5).
(g) Qualified immunity, defense and indemnification.
(1) The members, officers, executive director, employees and 
representatives of the commission shall be immune from suit and liability, 
both personally and in their official capacity, for any claim for damage to 
or loss of property or personal injury or other civil liability caused by or 
arising out of any actual or alleged act, error or omission that occurred or 
that the individual against whom the claim is made had a reasonable basis 
for believing occurred within the scope of commission employment, duties 
or responsibilities. Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to protect 
any such individual from suit or liability for any damage, loss, injury or 
liability caused by the intentional or willful or wanton misconduct of such 
individual. The procurement of insurance of any type by the commission 
shall not in any way compromise or limit the immunity granted hereunder.
(2) The commission shall defend any member, officer, executive 
director, employee, and representative of the commission in any civil 
action seeking to impose liability arising out of any actual or alleged act, 
error or omission that occurred within the scope of commission 
employment, duties or responsibilities or as determined by the commission 
that the individual against whom the claim is made had a reasonable basis 
for believing occurred within the scope of commission employment, duties 
or responsibilities. Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit such 
individual from retaining such individual's own counsel at the individual's 
own expense or that the actual or alleged act, error or omission did not 
result from the individual's intentional, willful or wanton misconduct.
(3) The commission shall indemnify and hold harmless any member, 
officer, executive director, employee or representative of the commission 
for the amount of any settlement or judgment obtained against that 
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individual arising out of any actual or alleged act, error or omission that 
occurred within the scope of commission employment, duties or 
responsibilities or that such individual had a reasonable basis for believing 
occurred within the scope of commission employment, duties or 
responsibilities, if the actual or alleged act, error or omission did not result 
from the intentional or willful or wanton misconduct of that individual.
(4) Venue is proper and judicial proceedings by or against the 
commission shall be brought solely and exclusively in a court of 
competent jurisdiction where the principal office of the commission is 
located. The commission may waive venue and jurisdictional defenses in 
any proceedings as authorized by commission rules.
(5) Nothing herein shall be construed as a limitation on the liability of 
any licensee for professional malpractice or misconduct, which shall be 
governed solely by any other applicable state laws.
(6) Nothing herein shall be construed to designate the venue or 
jurisdiction to bring actions for alleged acts of malpractice, professional 
misconduct, negligence or other such civil action pertaining to the practice 
of a PA. All such matters shall be determined exclusively by state law 
other than this compact.
(7) Nothing in this compact shall be interpreted to waive or otherwise 
abrogate a participating state's state action immunity or state action 
affirmative defense with respect to antitrust claims under the Sherman act, 
Clayton act or any other state or federal antitrust or anticompetitive law or 
regulation.
(8) Nothing in this compact shall be construed to be a waiver of 
sovereign immunity by the participating states or by the commission.
SECTION 8—DATA SYSTEM
(a) The commission shall provide for the development, maintenance, 
operation and utilization of a coordinated data and reporting system 
containing licensure, adverse action and the reporting of the existence of 
significant investigative information on all licensed PAs and applicants 
that are denied a license in participating states.
(b) Notwithstanding any other state law to the contrary, a 
participating state shall submit a uniform data set to the data system on all 
PAs to whom this compact is applicable, utilizing a unique identifier, as 
required by the rules of the commission, including:
(1) Identifying information;
(2) licensure data;
(3) adverse actions against a license or compact privilege;
(4) any denial of application for licensure and the reason for such 
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denial, excluding the reporting of any criminal history record information 
where such reporting is prohibited by law;
(5) the existence of significant investigative information; and
(6) other information that may facilitate the administration of this 
compact, as determined by the rules of the commission.
(c) Significant investigative information pertaining to a licensee in 
any participating state shall only be available to other participating states.
(d) The commission shall promptly notify all participating states of 
any adverse action taken against a licensee or an individual applying for a 
license that has been reported to such commission. Such adverse action 
information shall be available to any other participating state.
(e) Participating states contributing information to the data system 
may, in accordance with state or federal law, designate information that 
shall not be shared with the public without the express permission of the 
contributing state. Notwithstanding any such designation, such information 
shall be reported to the commission through the data system.
(f) Any information submitted to the data system that is subsequently 
expunged pursuant to federal law or the laws of the participating state 
contributing the information shall be removed from the data system upon 
reporting of such by the participating state to the commission.
(g) The records and information provided to a participating state 
pursuant to this compact or through the data system, when certified by the 
commission or an agent thereof, shall constitute the authenticated business 
records of the commission and shall be entitled to any associated hearsay 
exception in any relevant judicial, quasi-judicial or administrative 
proceedings in a participating state.
SECTION 9—RULEMAKING
(a) The commission shall exercise its rulemaking powers pursuant to 
the criteria set forth in this section and the rules adopted thereunder. 
Commission rules shall become binding as of the date specified by the 
commission for each rule.
(b) The commission shall adopt reasonable rules in order to 
effectively and efficiently implement and administer this compact and 
achieve its purposes. A commission rule shall be invalid and have no force 
or effect only if a court of competent jurisdiction holds that the rule is 
invalid because the commission exercised its rulemaking authority in a 
manner that is beyond the scope of the purposes of this compact, the 
powers granted hereunder or based upon another applicable standard of 
review.
(c) The rules of the commission shall have the force of law in each 
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participating state,  except that where the rules of the commission conflict 
with the laws of the participating state that establish the medical services, a 
PA may perform in the participating state, as held by a court of competent 
jurisdiction, and the rules of the commission shall be ineffective in that 
state to the extent of the conflict.
(d) If a majority of the legislatures of the participating states rejects a 
commission rule, by enactment of a statute or resolution in the same 
manner used to adopt this compact within four years of the date of 
adoption of the rule, then such rule shall have no further force and effect in 
any participating state or to any state applying to participate in the 
compact.
(e) Commission rules shall be adopted at a regular or special meeting 
of the commission.
(f) Prior to promulgation and adoption of a final rule by the 
commission and at least 30 days in advance of the meeting at which the 
rule will be considered and voted upon, the commission shall file a notice 
of proposed rulemaking:
(1) On the commission's website or other publicly accessible 
platform;
(2) to persons who have requested notice of the commission's notices 
of proposed rulemaking; and
(3) in such other ways as the commission may specify by rule.
(g) The notice of proposed rulemaking shall include:
(1) The time, date and location of the public hearing on the proposed 
rule and the proposed time, date and location of the meeting in which the 
proposed rule will be considered and voted upon;
(2) the text of and the reason for the proposed rule;
(3) a request for comments on the proposed rule from any interested 
person and the date by which written comments must be received; and
(4) the manner in which interested persons may submit notice to the 
commission of their intention to attend the public hearing or provide any 
written comments.
(h) Prior to adoption of a proposed rule, the commission shall allow 
persons to submit  written data, facts, opinions and arguments, which shall 
be made available to the public.
(i) If the hearing is to be held via electronic means, the commission 
shall publish the mechanism for access to the electronic hearing.
(1) All persons wishing to be heard at the hearing shall, as directed in 
the notice of proposed rulemaking published not less than five business 
days before the scheduled date of the hearing, notify the commission of 
their desire to appear and testify at the hearing.
(2) Hearings shall be conducted in a manner that provides each 
person who wishes to comment a fair and reasonable opportunity to 
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comment orally or in writing.
(3) All hearings shall be recorded. A copy of the recording and the 
written comments, data, facts, opinions and arguments received in 
response to the proposed rulemaking shall be made available to a person 
upon request.
(4) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a separate 
hearing on each proposed rule. Proposed rules may be grouped for the 
convenience of the commission at hearings required by this section.
(j) Following the public hearing, the commission shall consider all 
written and oral comments timely received.
(k) The commission shall, by majority vote of all delegates, take final 
action on the proposed rule and shall determine the effective date of the 
rule, if adopted, based on the rulemaking record and the full text of the 
rule.
(1) If adopted, the rule shall be posted on the commission's website.
(2) The commission may adopt changes to the proposed rule if the 
changes do not expand the original purpose of the proposed rule.
(3) The commission shall provide an explanation on its website of the 
reasons for any substantive changes made to the proposed rule as well as 
reasons for any substantive changes not made that were recommended by 
commenters.
(4) The commission shall determine a reasonable effective date for 
the rule. Except for an emergency as provided in subsection (l), the 
effective date of the rule shall be not sooner than 30 days after the 
commission issued the notice that it adopted the rule.
(l) Upon the determination that an emergency exists, the commission 
may consider and adopt an emergency rule with 24 hours' prior notice, 
without the opportunity for comment or hearing, expect that the usual 
rulemaking procedures provided in this compact and in this section shall 
be retroactively applied to the rule as soon as reasonably possible but in no 
event later than 90 days after the effective date of the rule. For the 
purposes of this provision, an emergency rule is one that shall be adopted 
immediately by the commission in order to:
(1) Address an imminent threat to public health, safety or welfare;
(2) prevent a loss of commission or participating state funds;
(3) meet a deadline for the promulgation of a commission rule that is 
established by federal law or rule; or
(4) protect public health and safety.
(m) The commission, or an authorized committee of the commission, 
may direct revisions to a previously adopted commission rule for purposes 
of correcting typographical errors, errors in format, errors in consistency 
or grammatical errors. Public notice of any revisions shall be posted on the 
commission's website. The revision shall be subject to challenge by any 
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person for a period of 30 days after posting. The revision may be 
challenged only on grounds that the revision results in a material change to 
a rule. A challenge shall be made as set forth in the notice of revisions and 
delivered to the commission prior to the end of the notice period. If no 
challenge is made, the revision shall take effect without further action. If 
the revision is challenged, the revision shall not take effect without the 
approval of the commission.
(n) No participating state's rulemaking requirements shall apply under 
this compact.
SECTION 10—OVERSIGHT, DISPUTE RESOLUTION AND 
ENFORCEMENT
(a) Oversight.
(1) The executive and judicial branches of state government in each 
participating state shall enforce this compact and take all actions necessary 
and appropriate to implement the compact.
(2) Venue is proper and judicial proceedings by or against the 
commission shall be brought solely and exclusively in a court of 
competent jurisdiction where the principal office of the commission is 
located. The commission may waive venue and jurisdictional defenses to 
the extent that it adopts or consents to participate in alternative dispute 
resolution proceedings. Nothing herein shall affect or limit the selection or 
propriety of venue in any action against a licensee for professional 
malpractice, misconduct or any such similar matter.
(3) The commission shall be entitled to receive service of process in 
any proceeding regarding the enforcement or interpretation of the compact 
or the commission's rules and shall have standing to intervene in such a 
proceeding for all purposes. Failure to provide the commission with 
service of process shall render a judgment or order in such proceeding 
void as to the commission, this compact or commission rules. 
(b) Default, technical assistance and termination.
(1) If the commission determines that a participating state has 
defaulted in the performance of its obligations or responsibilities under 
this compact or the commission rules, the commission shall provide 
written notice to the defaulting state and other participating states. The 
notice shall describe the default, the proposed means of curing the default 
and any other action that the commission may take and shall offer remedial 
training and specific technical assistance regarding the default.
(2) If a state in default fails to cure the default, the defaulting state 
may be terminated from this compact upon an affirmative vote of a 
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majority of the delegates of the participating states, and all rights, 
privileges and benefits conferred by this compact upon such state may be 
terminated on the effective date of termination. A cure of the default shall 
not relieve the offending state of obligations or liabilities incurred during 
the period of default.
(3) Termination of participation in this compact shall be imposed only 
after all other means of securing compliance have been exhausted. Notice 
of intent to suspend or terminate shall be given by the commission to the 
governor, the majority and minority leaders of the defaulting state's 
legislature and to the licensing board of each of the participating states.
(4) A state that has been terminated is responsible for all assessments, 
obligations and liabilities incurred through the effective date of 
termination, including obligations that extend beyond the effective date of 
termination.
(5) The commission shall not bear any costs related to a state that is 
found to be in default or that has been terminated from this compact, 
unless agreed upon in writing between the commission and the defaulting 
state.
(6) The defaulting state may appeal its termination from the compact 
by the commission by petitioning the United States district court for the 
District of Columbia or the federal district where the commission has its 
principal offices. The prevailing member shall be awarded all costs of such 
litigation, including reasonable attorney fees.
(7) Upon the termination of a state's participation in the compact, the 
state shall immediately provide notice to all licensees within that state of 
such termination:
(A) Licensees who have been granted a compact privilege in that 
state shall retain the compact privilege for 180 days following the effective 
date of such termination; and
(B) licensees who are licensed in that state who have been granted a 
compact privilege in a participating state shall retain the compact privilege 
for 180 days unless the licensee also has a qualifying license in a 
participating state or obtains a qualifying license in a participating state 
before the 180-day period ends, in which case, the compact privilege shall 
continue.
(c) Dispute resolution.
(1) Upon request by a participating state, the commission shall 
attempt to resolve disputes related to this compact that arise among 
participating states and between participating and nonparticipating states.
(2) The commission shall adopt a rule providing for both mediation 
and binding dispute resolution for disputes as appropriate.
(d) Enforcement.
(1) The commission, in the reasonable exercise of its discretion, shall 
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enforce the provisions of this compact and rules of the commission.
(2) If compliance is not secured after all means to secure compliance 
have been exhausted, by majority vote, the commission may initiate legal 
action in the United States district court for the District of Columbia or the 
federal district where the commission has its principal offices against a 
participating state in default to enforce compliance with the provisions of 
this compact and the commission's promulgated rules and bylaws. The 
relief sought may include both injunctive relief and damages. In the event 
that judicial enforcement is necessary, the prevailing party shall be 
awarded all costs of such litigation, including reasonable attorney fees.
(3) The remedies herein shall not be the exclusive remedies of the 
commission. The commission may pursue any other remedies available 
under federal or state law.
(e) Legal action against the commission.
(1) A participating state may initiate legal action against the 
commission in the United States district court for the District of Columbia 
or the federal district where the commission has its principal offices to 
enforce compliance with the provisions of the compact and its rules. The 
relief sought may include both injunctive relief and damages. In the event 
that judicial enforcement is necessary, the prevailing party shall be 
awarded all costs of such litigation, including reasonable attorney fees.
(2) No person other than a participating state shall enforce this 
compact against the commission.
SECTION 11—DATE OF IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PA 
LICENSURE COMPACT COMMISSION
(a) This compact shall come into effect on the date that this compact 
statute is enacted into law in the seventh participating state.
(1) On or after the effective date of the compact, the commission 
shall convene and review the enactment of each of the states that enacted 
the compact prior to the commission convening, called charter-
participating states, to determine if the statute enacted by each such 
charter-participating state is materially different than the model compact.
(A) A charter-participating state whose enactment is found to be 
materially different from the model compact shall be entitled to the default 
process set forth in section 10(b).
(B) If any participating state later withdraws from the compact or its 
participation is terminated, the commission shall remain in existence and 
the compact shall remain in effect even if the number of participating 
states should be fewer than seven. Participating states enacting the 
compact subsequent to the commission convening shall be subject to the 
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process set forth in section 7(c)(21) to determine if their enactments are 
materially different from the model compact and whether they qualify for 
participation in the compact.
(2) Participating states enacting the compact subsequent to the seven 
initial charter-participating states shall be subject to the process set forth in 
section 7(c)(21) to determine if their enactments are materially different 
from the model compact and whether they qualify for participation in the 
compact.
(3) All actions taken for the benefit of the commission or in 
furtherance of the purposes of the administration of the compact prior to 
the effective date of the compact or the commission coming into existence 
shall be considered to be actions of the commission unless specifically 
repudiated by the commission.
(b) Any state that joins this compact shall be subject to the 
commission's rules and bylaws as they exist on the date that this compact 
becomes law in that state. Any rule that has been previously adopted by 
the commission shall have the full force and effect of law on the day that 
this compact becomes law in that state.
(c) Any participating state may withdraw from this compact by 
enacting a statute repealing the same.
(1) A participating state's withdrawal shall not take effect until 180 
days after enactment of the repealing statute. During the 180-day period, 
all compact privileges that were in effect in the withdrawing state and were 
granted to licensees licensed in the withdrawing state shall remain in 
effect. If any licensee licensed in the withdrawing state is also licensed in 
another participating state or obtains a license in another participating state 
within the 180 days, the licensee's compact privileges in other participating 
states shall not be affected by the passage of the 180 days.
(2) Withdrawal shall not affect the continuing requirement of the state 
licensing board of the withdrawing state to comply with the investigative 
and adverse action reporting requirements of this compact prior to the 
effective date of withdrawal.
(3) Upon the enactment of a statute withdrawing a state from this 
compact, the state shall immediately provide notice of such withdrawal to 
all licensees within that state. Such withdrawing state shall continue to 
recognize all licenses granted pursuant to this compact for a minimum of 
180 days after the date of such notice of withdrawal.
(d) Nothing contained in this compact shall be construed to invalidate 
or prevent any PA licensure agreement or other cooperative arrangement 
between participating states and between a participating state and 
nonparticipating state that does not conflict with the provisions of this 
compact.
(e) This compact may be amended by the participating states. No 
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amendment to this compact shall become effective and binding upon any 
participating state until it is enacted materially in the same manner into the 
laws of all participating states as determined by the commission.
SECTION 12—CONSTRUCTION AND SEVERABILITY
(a) This compact and the commission's rulemaking authority shall be 
liberally construed so as to effectuate the purposes and the implementation 
and administration of the compact. Provisions of the compact expressly 
authorizing or requiring the adoption of rules shall not be construed to 
limit the commission's rulemaking authority solely for those purposes. 
(b) The provisions of this compact shall be severable, and if any 
phrase, clause, sentence or provision of this compact is held by a court of 
competent jurisdiction to be contrary to the constitution of any 
participating state, a state seeking participation in the compact or of the 
United States, or the applicability thereof to any government, agency, 
person or circumstance is held to be unconstitutional by a court of 
competent jurisdiction, the validity of the remainder of this compact and 
the applicability thereof to any other government, agency, person or 
circumstance shall not be affected thereby. 
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of this subsection or subsection 
(b), the commission may deny a state's participation in the compact or, in 
accordance with the requirements of section 10(b), terminate a 
participating state's participation in the compact, if it determines that a 
constitutional requirement of a participating state is, or would be with 
respect to a state seeking to participate in the compact, a material departure 
from the compact. Otherwise, if this compact shall be held to be contrary 
to the constitution of any participating state, the compact shall remain in 
full force and effect as to the remaining participating states and in full 
force and effect as to the participating state affected as to all severable 
matters.
SECTION 13—BINDING EFFECT OF COMPACT
(a) Nothing herein prevents the enforcement of any other law of a 
participating state that is not inconsistent with this compact.
(b) Any laws in a participating state in conflict with this compact are 
superseded to the extent of the conflict.
(c) All agreements between the commission and the participating 
states are binding in accordance with their terms.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its 
publication in the statute book.
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