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Senate committee reviews wide-ranging OPR bill, debates pharmacist prescribing and massage regulation

April 10, 2026 | Government Operations, SENATE, Committees, Legislative , Vermont


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Senate committee reviews wide-ranging OPR bill, debates pharmacist prescribing and massage regulation
An OPR representative walked the Senate Committee on Government Operations through changes in S.8588 on April 10, describing multiple administrative and professional‑practice updates. The bill packages disciplinary‑process changes, fee‑structure fixes and updates intended to facilitate interstate compact licensure for physicians, and includes health‑care provisions that would expand test‑and‑treat authority for pharmacists.

On pharmacist authority, committee members heard that the bill would allow pharmacists to test for influenza, COVID‑19 and strep and treat when an order exists, reflecting capacity of multiplex testing machines and the committee's rural health goals. Committee members and OPR staff also discussed whether HIV post‑exposure prophylaxis (PEP) and pre‑exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) should be added; OPR advised that Health and Welfare is considering related language and that any such addition would require development of state protocols and stakeholder engagement with the Board of Pharmacy and VDH before implementation. The committee agreed to invite the Vermont Medical Society to testify on the PEP/PrEP question.

A prolonged exchange addressed whether massage therapists should be licensed or registered. An OPR speaker summarized results of multiple Sunrise reviews and said staff "found no evidence of people having physical injury that was caused by untrained or unskilled or unqualified practice of massage," arguing registration (with complaint and discipline authority) satisfies the statutory test in title 26, chapter 57. Others on the committee raised concerns about human trafficking and whether licensure would enable mandatory background checks and stronger enforcement. OPR staff said registration already requires disclosure of criminal history and a pre‑denial process when a past conviction relates to practice.

The bill also makes technical changes: parity in stipulation‑review hearing rights for complainants, a practice remediation program and substance‑use monitoring that must be discretionary rather than a right, editing of 'good character' language to 'good standing' in some professions, pharmacy technician testing authority, structural fixes to fee language (no new fees), and edits to Board of Medical Practice language to enable FBI background‑check approval for compact physician licenses. The committee set a follow‑up session for Friday at 1:30 p.m. to continue work and hear additional witnesses; no final votes were taken at this meeting.

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