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Join our ORCA member e-mail listserve to get timely updates on legislation and serious issues for counselors. Others utilize it for casual professional consultation. Click here to join now. You must be an ORCA member to join.

 
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Healthcare Reform Info. PDF Print E-mail

 

Larry Conner, MA, LPC, educates us about the upcoming challenges for counselors as healthcare evolves in the U.S., and how we need to band together to address upcoming legislative and professional hurdles. Listen to his webinar on the topic here.

To Listen Right Now: Simply click on the link above and wait a little while. The recording should start playing. If it doesn't, use the instructions below to download and listen on your favorite MP3 player (e.g. iTunes.) To Download The MP3: On Windows: right-click on the link and select "Save Link As." On Macintosh: control-click on the link and select "Save Link As."

 

 
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Advocacy Links PDF Print E-mail

Coalition of Oregon Professional Associations for Counseling and Therapy: COPACT

 
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2010 Oct-Public Policy PDF Print E-mail

Department of Veterans Affairs Recognizes Licensed Professional Mental Health Counselors!

10.04.10

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has issued qualification standards formally recognizing licensed professional counselors as mental health specialists within the Veterans Health Administration. The standards, released internally to VA staff late on September 28th, and available online at http://www1.va.gov/vapubs/viewPublication.asp?Pub_ID=507&FType=2, are the culmination of years of work by ACA, the American Mental Health Counselors Association (AMHCA), and the National Board for Certified Counselors (NBCC) to open up mental health provider jobs within the VA to professional counselors. This is a landmark step forward for the counseling profession as well as an important means of expanding the pool of mental health service providers available to meet the large unmet treatment needs of our nation’s veterans.

 

 
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2011 Aug- Army SAP Update PDF Print E-mail

The American Counseling Association, the National Board for Certified Counselors, and the American Mental Health Counselors Association are pleased to announce that on July 26, 2011, Secretary of the Army John M. McHugh signed Army Directive 2011-09, Employment of Licensed Professional Counselors as Fully Functioning Army Substance Abuse Program Practitioners.  This directive authorizes “the Army Substance Abuse Program to employ licensed professional counselors and licensed mental health counselors as independent practitioners with a well-defined scope of practice.”

The directive also establishes credentialing and privileging standards for licensed counselors who seek employment through the Army Substance Abuse Program (ASAP).  The criteria include:

· Successful completion of a master’s degree in counseling from a regionally accredited college or university that has its counseling program accredited by the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Education Programs.  (Counselors who are already employed with ASAP or entered the application process for an ASAP counseling position prior to the effective date of the directive do not have to meet the accreditation requirement.)

· Possession of a state license as a professional counselor or mental health counselor at the highest clinical level offered by their state licensure board

· Passage of the National Clinical Mental Health Counselor Examination

The directive became effective upon signature by the Secretary of the Army on July 26, 2011.

You may recall that the Department of Defense had been charged by Congress with issuing regulations by June 20, 2011 to let licensed professional counselors practice independently within the TRICARE program.  We have been told that the Army SAP directive is a temporary policy that allows counselors to practice independently until the TRICARE regulations are completed. The final TRICARE regulations may—or may not—include the same requirements as the Army SAP directive. ACA, NBCC, and AMHCA continue to urge the Department of Defense to adopt broad TRICARE regulations that recognize all qualified professional counselors.

Qualifying counselors who are interested in Army SAP positions should act quickly. The Army is in dire need of more counselors and recently launched a national hiring initiative described here: http://www.dodlive.mil/index.php/2011/08/army-urgent-to-hire-130-substance-abuse-counselors-asap/.

ASAP vacancies are posted here for interested counselors:  http://medcell.army.mil/spotlight.asp?id=15. Although this webpage and the job announcements specifically reference social workers and psychologists, we have confirmed with Army SAP leadership that these positions are available to professional counselors.

Our organizations are pleased with this step forward, but continue to encourage recognition of all qualified professional counselors.  We welcome counselors to report back on any challenges or successes they encounter resulting from this new policy or employment opportunities.

_____________________________
Scott Barstow
Director of Public Policy & Legislation
American Counseling Association
ph 703-823-9800 x234 | 800-347-6647 x234
www.counseling.org

 
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