Billing / Fees / Insurance

South Carolina Acupuncture Bill Becomes Law -- Finally!

Atara Noiade, MS, LAc, DOM


Editor's note: The following article is an update on the status of H 3891, a law first reported on in the September 2004 issue of Acupuncture Today.


When we last heard from Martin Herbkersman, DAc, Dipl. Ac. (NCCAOM), the Acupuncture Act of South Carolina sat on the desk of Governor Mark Sanford. Hopes were high for the passage of the bill, but events took a turn for the worst before they improved -- the bill was vetoed! However, with great efforts on the part of Dr. Herbkersman and his brother, state Representative Bill Herbkersman, the House and Senate overturned the governor's veto by a commanding margin. The House vote was 111 to 13, and the Senate vote was 31 to zero!

In mid-December 2004, Gov. Sanford vetoed the bill citing reasons of principle. Everyone understood the reasons: the governor of South Carolina is opposed to "bobtail amendments" - amendments that may or may not be related to the original bill, but are added to the back of bills which are likely to pass. Two South Carolina senators had chosen to add the amendments to the original Acupuncture Act in an effort to keep their unrelated initiatives alive. In order to keep the bill from dying on the last day of the legislative session, the House voted to accept the new formation of the bill, but the governor would not hear of it. Further, the lobbyist working with Dr. Herbkersman needed to focus her attention on another client in the interim, and was no longer available. The South Carolina Acupuncture Act was unstable at best; thus, the task was left to Dr. Herbkersman and his brother.

In a state where the governor, the Senate and the House are all run by Republicans, the House and Senate had to make a decision to overturn a decision made by one of their own party. Rep. Herbkersman rallied tirelessly to convince the senators and representatives to override the governor's veto. Rep. Herbkersman's efforts, and the bipartisan nature of the bill, ultimately helped it to pass.

The Acupuncture Act of South Carolina:

  1. Sets up an acupuncture committee under the medical board. This will keep licensure costs low, avoiding exorbitant fees that would otherwise be necessary to run a free-standing acupuncture board with only 30 practitioners in South Carolina to foot the costs.
  2. Sets the entry-level standard to the level of the NCCAOM Diplomate for any individual to practice acupuncture in South Carolina.
  3. States that anyone practicing acupuncture without a license is guilty of a misdemeanor and can be fined.
  4. Eliminates physician supervision and referral requirements.

According to Dr. Herbkersman, several amazing events happened surrounding the passage of this bill, including one representative who garnered support for a standing vote by turning to the legislators around him and saying, "Stand up! Stand up for the vote!"

Dr. Herbkersman has also credited the American Association of Oriental Medicine (AAOM) as being an important resource in the legislative process and recommends calling on the AAOM for model legislation and other help. His advice to aspiring acupuncture lobbyists? Resilience.

"Never give up. I would not have expected an overturn of the Governor's veto!" Dr. Herbkersman said. He also strongly suggests getting personally acquainted with your local legislators, and to offer them treatments whenever possible. Their personal experience of acupuncture is a great asset.

What is on Dr. Herbkersman's agenda for the future? "Protecting our new law," he stated. Dr. Herbkersman added that he checks his state legislative site daily, searching the site with "acupuncture" as a keyword. This tells him whether there are any other interested parties proposing new bills that may affect the profession in South Carolina. He encourages all state associations to do the same in their efforts to protect their scope of practice.

April 2005
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