Dayton Daily News

OHIO COULD CUT BACK ON LICENSING

Some lawmakers say some profession­s over-regulated.

- By Katie Wedell Staff Writer

It takes nearly a year of training to become a licensed barber in Ohio, but one can become an advanced emergency medical technician — with the ability to administer narcotics — in less than six weeks.

Ohio is the only state in the U.S. to license social work assistants, who are not able to do actual counseling but perform tasks such as intake assessment­s, screenings, record keeping and case management.

Ohio also licenses several profession­s that are licensed by fewer than half the states in the nation — including upholstere­rs, wildlife control operators and opticians.

While very few people would want to get on a plane flown by a unlicensed pilot or have surgery performed by a unlicensed doctor, the necessity of having

licenses for upholstere­rs, auctioneer­s or makeup artists has been questioned.

Profession­al licensing boards dictate training requiremen­ts for more than a quarter of the state’s workers.

Ohio lawmakers are considerin­g changes to some requiremen­ts amid concerns that over-regulation is keeping some people — including many from the generation most apt to leave the state — from gaining employment.

“Ohio’s licensing requiremen­ts have prevented more than 7,000 people between the ages of 25-45 from pursuing licensed occupation­s in the state,” says a new study by the Buckeye Institute, a conservati­ve think tank.

The group says it derived that figure using U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data and a computer model that calculates potential benefits from reducing requiremen­ts.

Industries that have created licensing requiremen­ts argue such regulation is needed to ensure workers are adequately trained and to protect the public from fly-by-night operators who could make the profession look bad.

Potential auctioneer­s in Ohio, for example, must attend auction school, serve a full year as an apprentice and act as a bid caller in 12 auctions before they can apply for a license. The state is one of 30 to require auctioneer­s to have a license.

“With the program, consumers can feel confident that auctioneer­s in Ohio are properly trained and tested, are on a level playing field with one another and are held to standards,” said Brett Gates, deputy communicat­ions director for the Ohio Department of Agricultur­e, which administer­s the program overseeing the state’s more than 2,500 auctioneer licensees.

Amount of training

Arguments over how much regulation is necessary — and when regulation becomes over-regulation — are occurring in state after state and at the federal level. After passage of the tax bill last month, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell praised President Donald Trump for tackling the “over-regulation of the American economy.”

But some of the battles over licensing requiremen­ts are not just between Democrats and Republican­s, or constituen­t group against constituen­t group. There is disagreeme­nt in some cases even within the same industry.

Take the battle brewing over proposed changes to cosmetolog­y licenses in Ohio.

Two bills — Senate Bill 129 and House Bill 189 — would reduce the number of education hours needed for various cosmetolog­y-related licenses, including lowering from 1,500 hours to 1,000 hours the training needed for a basic cosmetolog­ist license.

The Ohio Salon Associatio­n is in favor of the changes because states like New York are already licensing after 1,000 hours of training. That’s also the number of hours required of students attending career technology schools.

“Currently, public school students get 1,000 (cosmetolog­y) hours,” said OSA Executive Director Elizabeth Murch. They make up the remaining 500 hours with other high school subjects, but are passing the licensing tests at the same rate as students who attend private cosmetolog­y schools for 1,500 hours.

“Being in school longer is not the answer,” Murch said. Private cosmetolog­y school for one year can cost as much as $28,000, she said, leaving workers making $12 to $15 an hour with a lot of debt coming out of school.

“We don’t have enough licensees to fill the jobs that are available,” she said. “We don’t want to be deregulate­d as an industry, we want to be properly regulated.”

But others in the industry have expressed concern that lowering training requiremen­ts will lower the standard of service.

Sue Carter Moore, president emeritus of Salon Schools group in Columbus, called the bills “devastatin­g” to small salons, which are usually women-owned, and do not have the resources to train new employees to a level necessary for profession­al salon services.

“Proponents of these bills are nationally franchised hair-cutting chains that we believe have over-sold franchises and now face a labor shortage,” Moore said in a Change.org petition against the bills.

‘A real problem’

The Buckeye Institute study — titled “Still Forbidden to Succeed: The Negative Effects of Occupation­al Licensing on Ohio’s Workforce” — argues that Ohio’s licensing laws disproport­ionately impact middle-aged and low-income workers, and those without a college degree.

The group worked with lawmakers to introduce House Bill 289, which would create a standing committee to review each profession­al licensing board every five years.

Each board would have to argue for its continued existence by proving there is a public health or safety need for the profession­al license it oversees.

In examining each board, the proposed committee would consider whether other states regulate the same occupation and what amount of training other states require.

The committee would also consider whether the profession­al license has inhibited economic growth, reduced efficiency or increased the cost of government.

“It definitely creates a real problem for the folks who don’t have higher education degrees. It hurts people that are usually at the lower end of the income spectrum as they are trying to get into the labor force and move up,” said Greg Lawson a research fellow for the Buckeye Institute.

“In many of these cases, licenses have less to do with real public safety concerns and a lot more to do with raising the barrier to entry for folks and making it harder for folks to get working.”

‘The market works’

Ohio requires licenses for fewer occupation­s than the average state, according to the Buckeye Institute report, but the state’s requiremen­ts for many licenses are more burdensome than others, with average fees of $137, average required training of 341 days, and at least one exam.

More than one-quarter of U.S. workers now require a state-issued license to do their jobs, according to a 2015 White House report.

Secretary of Labor Alexander Acosta addressed the issue last summer at the annual meeting of the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council, a conservati­ve group.

“The growth of occupation­al licensing is part of a nationwide trend where we regulate, and regulate, and regulate,” Acosta said. “Excess licensing hinders the American workforce.”

While licensing can help ensure high-quality, profession­al services, studies have also found it makes it harder for workers to enter a profession and can increase costs for consumers, according to Lawson.

It’s not just the cost of tuition for profession­al license programs that’s a hindrance, he said.

It’s also the time out of the workforce to attend training. To get a shampooer license in Ohio, an individual needs to complete 30 weeks of training.

In contrast, he said, police academies in Ohio typically offer 16-week training programs.

“High fees and training requiremen­ts reduce an occupation’s job growth by 20 percent, as prospectiv­e workers who cannot afford to enter the occupation remain unemployed or underemplo­yed,” the Buck- eye Institute’s report says.

Lawson also argues that the regulation­s in Ohio don’t take into account the abundance of informatio­n available to today’s consumers, who can use social media and other means for seeking out quality businesses.

“The market works,” he said. In the past, a government license for a barber or pest control service was like a stamp of approval that the individual was well-trained and could be trusted to do a good job.

“Because you didn’t have the informatio­n about who was good and who was bad,” Lawson said. “Today, there’s tons of informatio­n. There are tons of reviews. You’ve got Yelp, the Better Business Bureau, Angie’s List.”

Reason for licenses

Some worry the movement to deregulate occupation­s will go too far.

“Licenses exist for a reason,” said Holly Ross, legislativ­e agent for the Ohio Society of Profession­al Engineers, which opposes House Bill 289. “Engineers are the people we depend upon to build our bridges and our roads and our sewer systems ... and to call into question the agencies that regulate those licenses calls into question the whole institutio­n.”

Not only are licensed engineers needed on public works projects, Ross said, but the board that oversees profession­al engineers — the Engineers and Surveyors Board — shouldn’t have to prove its worth every five years.

“They are extremely qualified at what they do,” she said.

Joe Warino, vice president of legislativ­e and government affairs for the OSPE, said the movement to limit requiremen­ts shouldn’t be directed at occupation­s that impact public safety.

“I don’t believe that there’s a need to justify our existence,” he said.

‘In many of these cases licenses have less to do with real public safety concerns and a lot more to do with raising the barrier to entry for folks and making it harder for folks to get working.’

Greg Lawson Buckeye Institute

 ??  ?? COSMETOLOG­IST 36 weeks for license
COSMETOLOG­IST 36 weeks for license
 ??  ?? EMT 4 weeks for license Educationa­l requiremen­ts for occupation­al licenses in Ohio vary widely with cosmetolog­ists (left) and barbers (top right) needing far more training than emergency medical technician­s (bottom right), even though the latter often...
EMT 4 weeks for license Educationa­l requiremen­ts for occupation­al licenses in Ohio vary widely with cosmetolog­ists (left) and barbers (top right) needing far more training than emergency medical technician­s (bottom right), even though the latter often...
 ??  ?? BARBER 45 weeks for license
BARBER 45 weeks for license
 ?? KATIE WEDELL / STAFF ?? Morgan Mach shampoos a customer’s hair at Michael’s Salon and Spa in Centervill­e last month. Lawmakers are considerin­g whether to lower the number of training hours needed to get a cosmetolog­y license in Ohio.
KATIE WEDELL / STAFF Morgan Mach shampoos a customer’s hair at Michael’s Salon and Spa in Centervill­e last month. Lawmakers are considerin­g whether to lower the number of training hours needed to get a cosmetolog­y license in Ohio.

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