Thursday, January 29, 2009

History and Timeline of Massage Therapy Legislation

On Thursday, March 31, 2005, the Georgia Massage Therapy Practice Act (SB 110) passed the House of Representatives. On May 10, 2005, Governor Perdue signed it into law at 5:00 p.m. This act professionalized massage therapy by setting minimum standards, a minimum of 500 hours of core education from a state approved school and have passed the National Certification Examination for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork (NCETMB) or a similar certifying examination that is approved by the Licensing Board. A generous grandfathering provision expired on July 1, 2007. Jane Johnson (Marietta), then Chapter President Robb Doyle (Atlanta).

Members of the
AMTA-Georgia Chapter were very active in getting this bill passed, as well as representatives from the Federation of Therapeutic Massage, Bodywork and Somatic Practice Organizations. Opponents of state regulation also influenced the bill.

But that was not the beginning. I remember sitting in a committee in the State Capitol Building after graduation and while I was teaching at the Atlanta School of Massage. Our student recruiter gave an excellent presentation, and the man sitting next to me commented that the Atlanta School of Massage supported this legislation because they were the only school in the state. I commented to him, a member or lobbyist for the medical board, that there was another school starting up, and soon there would be a second school.

There might have been efforts before that. The reprint below from the Illinois Chapter of the AAMM indicates that massage legislation was of interest to Georgians in the 1960's, although I do not know of any record that a bill was ever introduced.

Building an Oral History
By contributing to this blog, we can build an oral history of massage legislation in Georgia. Were you or someone you know involved? What was your or their involvement? Do you know the number or title of any of the bills that were previously introduced?

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