New Jersey 2024 2024-2025 Regular Session

New Jersey Assembly Bill A2813 Introduced / Fiscal Note

                       
Office of Legislative Services 
State House Annex 
P.O. Box 068 
Trenton, New Jersey  08625 
 	Legislative Budget and Finance Office 
Phone (609) 847-3105 
Fax (609) 777-2442 
www.njleg.state.nj.us 
  
 
LEGISLATIVE FISCAL ESTIMATE 
ASSEMBLY, No. 2813 
STATE OF NEW JERSEY 
221st LEGISLATURE 
 
DATED: MARCH 19, 2024 
 
 
SUMMARY 
 
Synopsis: Enters NJ in Social Work Licensure Compact. 
Type of Impact: Annual increase in State expenditures; Annual decrease in State 
revenues. 
Agencies Affected: Department of Law and Public Safety. 
 
 
Office of Legislative Services Estimate 
Fiscal Impact 	Annual 
State Expenditure Increase  	Indeterminate 
State Revenue Decrease 	Indeterminate 
 
 
 The Office of Legislative Services (OLS) concludes that annual State expenditures will 
increase and State revenues may decrease by indeterminate amounts under the bill, which will 
enter the State into the interstate Social Work Licensure Compact.   
 The OLS cannot quantify the net fiscal effects on New Jersey’s State Board of Social Work 
Examiners, given the lack of sufficient information regarding: 1) the increase in board 
operating expenses from joining the Social Workers Licensure Compact and regulating 
additional out-of-state social workers who practice in New Jersey; and 2) the decrease in 
license fee revenues from an unknown number of social workers practicing in this State who 
reside in other compact states who no longer will apply for a New Jersey license. 
 The State’s participation in the Social Work Licensure Compact may result in ongoing 
operating costs for New Jersey’s State Board of Social Work Examiners, which licenses 
certified social workers, licensed social workers, and licensed clinical social workers.  The 
OLS also notes there could be one-time expenditures from any modification that may have to 
be made to the existing social worker licensee data system to comply with compact 
requirements. 
 As the State Board of Social Work Examiners is statutorily required to pay for its operating 
expenses out of its fee collections, the OLS notes that the board may adjust its license fee  FE to A2813  
2 
 
amounts, if necessary, to account for any significant changes in its finances from joining this 
interstate compact.  
 
 
BILL DESCRIPTION 
 
 This bill will enter New Jersey into the Social Work Licensure Compact.  The compact 
establishes a multistate license system in which an individual licensed at the clinical, master’s, or 
bachelor’s level in social work needs only to obtain licensure in one state that is a party to the 
compact to practice as a social worker in another member state to the compact, so long as the 
individual meets certain requirements established under the compact.  
 Under the bill, provisions are established regarding, among other items, the authority of a 
member state’s licensing authority; how an adverse action against a multistate licensee is managed; 
the set-up of the Social Work Licensure Compact Commission and its Executive Committee; the 
collection of data on member states; and how to withdraw from the compact, if sought by a member 
state.  
 
 
FISCAL ANALYSIS 
 
EXECUTIVE BRANCH 
 
 None received. 
 
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE SERVICES 
 
 The OLS determines that annual State expenditures will increase by an indeterminate amount 
under the bill, which will enter the State into the interstate Social Work Licensing Compact.  The 
OLS cannot quantify the net fiscal impact of the bill, given a lack of sufficient information on the 
impact that the State’s participation in the compact may have on operating costs for New Jersey’s 
State Board of Social Work Examiners, within the Department of Law and Public Safety’s 
Division of Consumer Affairs.  
 First, the bill may increase the State Board of Social Work Examiners’ operating expenses due 
to regulating additional out-of-State social workers who are granted a privilege to practice in the 
State through the compact.  The Division of Consumer Affairs does not have information on the 
number of certified social workers, licensed social workers, and licensed clinical social workers 
residing in compact member states who may apply for a privilege to practice in the State.  As such, 
the extent to which the board’s operational costs to process applications, monitor social workers 
practicing in the State, and provide compact member states with information regarding State 
licensed social workers cannot be determined.   
 The board also may incur one-time costs to align its existing data system for certified social 
workers, licensed social workers, and licensed clinical social workers with the requirements of the 
compact’s data system.  Without information regarding the extent to which the board’s existing 
system aligns with the requirements of the compact’s data system, the OLS cannot determine the 
costs associated with the data system requirements established under the bill. 
 The OLS notes that another factor affecting the State’s costs to join the compact is the annual 
fee that the compact commission may assess from member states.  FE to A2813  
3 
 
 Finally, the bill may decrease State revenues from social worker licensing fees charged to a 
social worker currently living in a compact member remote state who may relinquish their existing 
New Jersey license.  The OLS cannot determine with any certainty the number of licensed social 
workers living in a remote compact member state who may seek to convert a state license to a 
privilege to practice.  The number could be reduced by the fact that neither New York nor Delaware 
have adopted the compact or have pending legislation to join the compact; Pennsylvania is the 
only state bordering New Jersey which has pending legislation to join the compact.  However, the 
fact that the bill allows social workers, who reside in a compact member state, to practice via 
telehealth in a remote compact state could significantly reduce the number of out-of-State social 
workers seeking State licensure.   
 The revenue impact of such a shift by out-of-state social workers will be determined by the 
amount of the fee that the State may charge, as permitted under the bill.  To the extent that the 
State’s fee for a license matches or nears the $120 to $160 currently charged for an initial or 
renewal license, any impact on State revenues would likely be modest. 
 According to the FY 2025 Governor’s Budget, the board regulated 25,576 social workers in 
FY 2023 and an estimated 24,500 in FY 2024.  The OLS does not know how many of these licenses 
qualify for reciprocity to work in another State.  According to Profile of the Social Work 
Workforce, a report from George Washington University issued in 2017, there were an estimated 
650,000 to 672,000 active social workers in the United States, and the report noted that 
significantly fewer social workers were licensed.  
 Further, New Jersey currently participates in several interstate professional licensing compacts 
for health professionals: the Counseling Compact, the Nurse Licensure Compact, the Interstate 
Medical Licensure Compact, the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact, and the Physical 
Therapy Licensure Compact.  Moreover, additional bills that would enter the State into various 
health professional interstate licensure compacts have been introduced during the current 
legislative session. 
 
 
Section: Law and Public Safety 
Analyst: Kristin Brunner Santos 
Lead Fiscal Analyst 
Approved: Thomas Koenig 
Legislative Budget and Finance Officer 
 
 
This legislative fiscal estimate has been produced by the Office of Legislative Services due to the 
failure of the Executive Branch to respond to our request for a fiscal note. 
 
This fiscal estimate has been prepared pursuant to P.L.1980, c.67 (C.52:13B-6 et seq.).