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This Week in the Legislature
The House and Senate debated and voted on bills in day-long floor
sessions Monday-Wednesday.
Thursday and Friday was devoted to conference committees
trying to wrap up negotiations on a variety of bills and the budget.
This is an interesting and
sometime dangerous time in the legislative process as behind the
scenes maneuvering can often resurrect seemingly dead bills in
conference committee reports. You
will see this in the “Bill Status” report below to the KDA’s
benefit. The lengthy
casino gambling debates and passage in both the House and Senate
have soured many legislators.
Current plans are for the legislature to work through April 3rd
before their traditional First Adjournment.
The week-long “Veto” or “Wrap Up” session is set to begin on
Wed., April 25.
Credit Card Processing Switch Scam Reported
A member reported to the KDA office yesterday that a salesperson
pretending to be with the KDA-endorsed RBS Lynk credit card
processing program called his office and requested information to
update this current processing system.
The information requested included bank accounts, dentist
license number, etc.
Luckily, the member dentist called Lynk to verify these changes and
found that this was scam used to get persons to switch their
service. RBS Lynk has
informed the KDA that there are no updates at this time.
Anyone receiving a similar call should discount it and
contact the KDA immediately.
KDA Board of Delegates to Meet
The Board of Delegates is scheduled to meet next on
Thursday, April 19 at
the KSU
Alumni Center
in Manhattan
at 9:00 A.M. in
conjunction with the KDA Annual Meeting.
KDA Annual Meeting
It’s time to register for the KDA Annual Meeting April 19-21, 2007
in Manhattan.
The newly renovated Holiday Inn at the Campus and the
KSU Alumni Center
is the location for the meeting.
We are especially excited to have the “voice of the Chiefs,”
Mitch Holthus, provide our opening Keynote Address on Friday
morning. The KDA has
also booked Colbert Hills Golf Course for a scramble format golf
tournament on the afternoon of Thursday, April 19 with “shotgun”
start at 12:30 P.M.
Start putting together your golf teams and plan to join us!
To register or to get more information on the KDA Annual
Meeting go to the KDA Annual Meeting link at KDA Online-
www.ksdental.org.
The agenda for the Annual
Meeting is below
2007 KDA Annual Meeting - April 19-21, 2007
Thursday, April 19
- K-State Alumni Center
9:00 am to Noon
Board of Delegates
12:30 -5:30 pm
Golf at Colbert Hills
4:30 – 6:00 pm
Welcome Social in Exhibit Hall
7:30 pm
Aggieville Olympics
Friday,
April 20
7:00 – 8:00 am
Past Presidents’ Breakfast
8:00 – 9:00 am
Keynote Address by Mitch Holthus
9:00 am – noon
Dr. Charles Blair (Practice Management)
Dr. Johnathan Ferencz (Sponsored by Nobel Biocare)
Dr. Paul Belvedere (Esthetics)
Noon – 1:30 pm
Lunch
1:30 – 4:30 pm
Dr. Charles Blair (Practice Management)
Dr. Johnathan Ferencz (Sponsored by Nobel Biocare)
Dr. Paul Belvedere (Esthetics)
6:00 – 6:45 pm
President’s Cocktail Reception
6:45 – 9:00 pm
President’s Dinner Party
Saturday,
April 21
- Holiday Inn at the Campus
7:30 – 9:00 am
New Members Orientation Breakfast
9:00 – noon
Dr. Dale Cipra (Prosthodontics)
Lt. David Weed, Drug Program from KHPl
Noon – 1:30 pm
K-D-PAC Luncheon (Congressman Jerry Moran Invited)
1:30 – 4:30 pm
KDA Annual Business Meeting followed by Board of
Delegates
Dental Board to Hold Meeting in Conjunction with KDA
The Kansas Dental Board has scheduled its regular meeting to be held
in conjunction with the KDA Annual Meeting on
Friday, April 20 in the
State Room of the Holiday Inn at the Campus in Manhattan.
The meeting is open to the public and KDA members are
encouraged to attend to see what the Dental Board is all about.
Dental Issues Status
The 2007 Legislative Session begins a new two-year session.
All Senate Bills (SB) will be new beginning with SB 1.
All House Bills (HB) will begin with HB 2001.
Dental Practice
SB 82
does not apply directly to dentistry, but the KDA is monitoring it
very closely as it would allow would allow school of chiropractic
medicine and osteopathy an exemption from the
corporate practice
prohibition in the healing arts act.
The bill has been passed by
the Senate and House and is now awaiting the Governor’s signature.
SB 176
is the bill that amends the dental hygienist
Extended Care Permit
(ECP) provisions passed in 2002.
The bill reduces the amount clinical experience hours to
qualify for an ECP I from 1,800 to 1,200 hours; creates a method for
previously qualified dental hygienists’ to qualify if they have been
in a non-clinical or not practicing in the previous five years;
modifies the practice settings to better identify underserved
populations, and; allows ECP dental hygienists to apply topical
anesthetic. The KDA
Board of Delegates reviewed and approved the proposed bill at its
November meeting. The
Senate Committee on Public Health and Welfare amended the bill at
the suggestion of the KDA to allow dental hygienists to apply
topical anesthesia under general supervision.
The bill has been passed by the full Senate and the House
Committee on Health and Human Services recommended it favorably for
passage.
The contents of SB 176 were
put in to HB 2214 by a joint conference committee of House and
Senate members. It now
awaits action by both Houses.
HB 2214
would authorize the Kansas Dental Board (KDB) to deny, revoke
suspend or limit a dentist’s
sedation permit.
This is current practice, however, the KDB’s recent review of the
sedation and anesthesia rules and regulations brought into question
its authority to do so.
The bill has been passed by
the full House and Senate with different provisions.
HB 2214 is assigned to a conference committee.
The provisions of HB 2215 and SB 176 are now in this bill.
HB 2216
is the Dental Board’s bill that will
change the biennial
licensure schedule of dentists and dental hygienists.
Currently, all dentists renew their license in odd years and
dental hygienists renew in even years.
The new method will mix dentist and dental hygienist
licensure renewal based on the licensee’s license number.
As a result, about half of the dental hygienists and dentists
that renew in 2008 and 2009 respectively will have a one-time one
year renewal.
The bill has been signed by
the Governor and will become law on July 1, 2007.
HB 2530
would explicitly exempt
healthcare providers from the Kansas Consumer
Protection Act (KCPA) statute.
This corrects the problem recently created by a Kansas
Supreme Court ruling that held that healthcare providers are
included in the provisions that were meant to cover deceptive
practices concerning retail transactions.
A group of healthcare provider organizations (including the
KDA), led by the Kansas Medical Society, are teaming up to push for
HB 2530. The House
Committee on Judiciary amended HB 2530 to clarify that healthcare
providers were exempt from the KCPA for matters concerning
“professional judgment”, but not front office practices such as
billing and advertising. The bill has been passed by the House and
the Senate Committee on Judiciary has held a hearing on the bill.
The KDA provided written testimony in support of the bill in
both the House and Senate. The
Judiciary Conference Committee has added the provisiosn of HB 2530
to the SB
55.
Mercury
SB 1
is similar to bills that the KDA has monitored in past years that
would prohibit mercury-based
thimerosol in vaccines.
Unlike past bills, SB 1 provides that the Secretary of Health
may exempt a vaccine containing thimerosol if there is a vaccine
shortage, epidemic, bioterrorist incident, etc.
SB 1 was introduced by Senate minority leader Anthony Hensley
and Senator Dennis Wilson.
The Senate Committee on Public Health and Welfare held
hearing on
SB 1 this past week.
No action is expected.
HB 2526
would create a statewide
atmospheric mercury deposition monitoring network to measure the
deposition of mercury in Kansas.
The data collected will be made available to Kansas-based
research institutes and scientists for exploration of the impact of
mercury on Kansas
flora, fauna and human population.
HB 2526 has been introduced to monitor atmospheric mercury
created by coal-fire electric generating plants, but could impact
dentistry.
The House and Senate have
both passed this bill.
Insurance
SB 175
would require all insurance policies to contain a provision to allow
for the assignment of
benefits directly to a provider of the care.
The KDA testified in support
of the bill at a hearing in Senate Committee on Financial
Institutions and Insurance this past week.
SB 175 is exempt from the “House of Origin” deadline and,
therefore, remains “alive”.
SB 273
would add dentistry to the
“healthcare prompt payment act.”
This would require a dental insurance carrier to pay a clean
dental claim within 30 days of receipt.
The KDA testified in support
of the bill at a hearing on the bill in the Senate and House
Committees on Financial Institutions and Insurance.
The Senate and House have passed the bill.
The bill was amended into
SB 239.
Public Health
SB 37
would prohibit tobacco
smoking in all indoor public places except a “cigar-tobacco
bar.”
The Senate Committee on
Judiciary advanced the bill to the full Senate without a
recommendation. SB 37
is exempt from the “House of Origin” deadline and, therefore,
remains “alive”, but it no action is expected this year as a summer
“Interim Study” is likely on this bill.
SB 302
would create the “controlled
substance monitoring task force” that would implement a program
to monitor controlled substances.
The task force would be made up of 11 members including a
person appointed by the Kansas Dental Association.
SB 302 has been passed by the
Senate and House.
SB 318
would direct the State of
Kansas
to use the tobacco
settlement money for tobacco cessation and prevention
activities.
The bill is exempt and
assigned to the Senate Committee on Ways and Means.
The KDA has joined on a letter supporting SB 318.
Charitable Work
HB 2102
would allow healthcare professionals who donate their time to
indigent patients at significantly reduced or no cost to apply
through a nonprofit community service organization to apply for a
tax credit at the rate
of $50/hour. The tax
credit would cap at $3,000/year/ taxpayer.
The KDA presented testimony
in support of HB 2102 in the House Committee on Taxation No action
is expected on HB 2102 as many other professions asked to be added
to the bill causing significant confusion and frustration for the
committee.
Government Administrative
SB 16
would authorize the Joint
Committee on Children’s Issues to introduce legislation.
This Committee has been in existence since 1999 usually meets
during the Legislative Interim.
This bill would provide the Committee with more power to
carry outs it legislative charge.
SB 16 is assigned to the
Senate Committee on Ways and Means where a hearing has been held.
SB 16 is exempt from the
“House of Origin” deadline and, therefore, remains “alive”.
HB 2548
would
require applicants for
licenses, certifications, registrations, or renewals with state
boards to provide their social security number (SSN) or tax
identification number (TIN).
The Department of Revenue states that this information is
critical to the Department’s Discovery Matching Licensing Program.
The program researches the tax records of applicants for licenses,
certifications, registrations, or renewals with state boards to
identify and locate persons who are not current in their Kansas tax liabilities.
The House has passed this
bill and it is currently being considered by a joint House and
Senate conference committee.
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