Chapter 12 HEALTH AND SANITATION*
ARTICLE I. IN GENERAL
Sec. 12-11.1. Massage.*
(a) Definitions. In this section, terms that are defined in the state
Health Occupations Article have the same meaning, and the following words and
phrases have the following meanings:
(1) Massage has the same meaning
as “massage therapy” under section 3-5A-01 of the Health Occupations
Article.
(2) Massage establishment means any business where any
employee, agent, or contractor who is not a certified massage therapist or
registered massage practitioner under state law performs a
massage.
(3) Director means the director of the permits and codes
department or his or her designee.
(4) Board means the Maryland State
board of Chiropractic Examiners.
(5) Department means the department
of permits and codes.
(b) Scope: This section does not apply to:
(1) An
individual with a license, registration or other approval issued by the Board to
provide massage under section 3-5A-05 of the Health Occupations
Article;
(2) An athletic trainer who:
(i) is certified by a nationally
recognized athletic trainer certification agency identified by the director and
works under the supervision of a physician, while functioning in the athletic
trainer’s professional capacity;
(ii) is employed by an accredited
educational institution, while performing professional duties at that
institution; or
(iii) is employed by a professional sports team, while
treating members of that team; and
(3) A business in which every person who
performs massage is a certified massage therapist or registered massage
practitioner under state law.
(c) Massage establishment.
(1)(A) Any
massage establishment must have a license issued by the director under this
section. The licensee is the owner of the establishment. If the owner is not an
individual, the owner must designate on the application an individual as the
owner’s representative. The owner’s representative must consent on
the application to be so designated. The representative must accept any notice
sent to the owner under this section. If the owner does not pay any fine,
penalty or fee due under this section, the director may collect the fine,
penalty, or fee from the owner’s representative. The owner must not
designate an individual as its representative under this subsection if the
individual is not qualified to receive a manager’s license under
subsection (d).
(B) The licensee or a licensed manager must be on the
premises at all times while the establishment is occupied.
(C) A person must
not own or operate a massage establishment without obtaining a massage
establishment license. This requirement may be enforced by the director or the
police department.
(D) The director or the police department may close an
unlicensed massage establishment until the business and each person owning or
operating the business obtains a license under this section.
(2) Except as
otherwise provided in this section, the director must, with the assistance of
the police department, review each application and issue a massage establishment
license if:
(A) the applicant meets the requirement of this section, is
qualified under standards set by ordinance, and completes a license application
form provided by the director;
(B) the massage establishment facility meets
minimum standards set by ordinance;
(C) the applicant pays an applicant fee
and license fee; and
(D) the establishment complies with all applicable
zoning, health, fire prevention, and building laws and regulations.
(3) The
director must conduct a pre-licensing inspection of any massage establishment
and may conduct other inspections necessary to enforce this section.
(4) A
massage establishment must meet minimum standards set by regulation at all
times.
(5) Any person who operates a massage establishment must not perform
or allow another person to perform a massage unless the person who performs the
massage:
(A) is a certified massage therapist or registered massage
practitioner under state law; or
(B) has a valid city massage worker’s
license.
(6) Any person who operates a massage establishment must permit a
city police officer or the director to enter the massage establishment at any
time during operating hours, and at any other time in an emergency or when the
establishment is occupied.
(7) Any person who operates a massage
establishment must not allow a person of one gender to massage a person of
another gender. This restriction does not apply if the person who performs the
massage is a state-certified massage therapist or registered massage
practitioner.
(8) A massage establishment license has a term of one year and
must be renewed annually.
(9) A massage establishment license must not be
transferred from one person to another. A massage establishment license must not
be transferred from one location to another location until a license is issued
for the new location. A massage establishment license applies to a single
location specified in the license.
(10) If an applicant for a massage
establishment license does not own the building where the establishment would be
located, the building owner must approve the use of the building as a massage
establishment on a form provided by the director.
(d) Massage establishment
manager.
(1) The licensee, if an individual, and any person who manages a
massage establishment in the absence of the licensee, including an owner’s
representative designated under subsection (c)(1)(A), must obtain a massage
establishment manager’s license from the director and renew the license
each year.
(2) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the director
must, with the assistance of the police department, review each application and
issue a license if the applicant is qualified under this section and the
standards established by regulation. Each applicant must:
(A) complete an
application form provided by the director;
(B) submit proof of good health
required by the director;
(C) pay the application and license
fee;
(D) be at least eighteen (18) years old.
(E) have not been
convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or served any term of probation
as a result of being charged with:
(i) a felony;
(ii) a crime involving
moral turpitude;
(iii) violation of a controlled dangerous substances
law;
(iv) violation of any law regulating the practice of a health
occupation;
(F) not habitually use any drug or alcoholic beverage to an
extent that impairs professional performance;
(G) provide a passport-size
photograph, fingerprints, and a list of the applicant’s occupation or
employment for the three (3) years before filing the application; and
(H) if
the applicant is not a United States citizen, provide, evidence of legal
presence and employability in the United States.
(e) Massage
worker.
(1) Any person who performs massage for compensation and who is not
a certified massage therapist or registered massage practitioner under state law
must obtain a massage worker’s license from the director and renew the
license each year. An individual may apply for a license under this subsection
only if the individual is expressly exempt under section 3-5A-05(a)(2) of the
Health Occupations Article from the certification and registration requirements
of that section.
(2) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the
director must, with the assistance of the police department, review each
application and issue a license if the applicant is qualified under this section
and the standards established by ordinance. Each applicant
must:
(A) complete an application form provided by the
director;
(B) submit proof of good health;
(C) pay the application and
license fee;
(D) be at least eighteen (18) years old;
(E) have
satisfactorily completed at least sixty (60) credit hours of education at an
institution of higher education as defined by state law;
(F) have
successfully completed at least five hundred (500) hours of massage training
provided by an organization approved by the Board; and
(G) have not been
convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or served any term of probation
as a result of being charged with:
(i) a felony;
(ii) a crime involving
moral turpitude;
(iii) violation of a controlled dangerous substances law;
or
(iv) violation of any law regulating the practice of health
occupation;
(H) not habitually use any drug or alcoholic beverage to an
extent that impairs professional performance;
(I) provide a passport-size
photograph, fingerprints, and a list of the applicant’s occupation or
employment for the three (3) years before filing the application; and
(J) if
the applicant is not a United States citizen, provide evidence of legal presence
and legal employability in the United States.
(3) A person who holds a
license issued under this section and who is not a certified massage therapist
or registered massage practitioner under state law must not perform massage
except as the agent or employee of a massage establishment that has a valid city
license.
(4) A massage worker licensed under this subsection must only
massage persons of the worker’s same gender.
(5) A massage
worker’s license must not be transferred from one individual to
another.
(f) Fees. The mayor and board of aldermen must set application and
license fees by ordinance or resolution that substantially cover the cost of
administering this section.
(g) Denial or revocation of license. The
director may refuse to issue a license under this section, and may suspend or
revoke a license issued under this section, after a hearing for which reasonable
notice has been given, if the licensee or applicant:
(1) violates any
provision of this section;
(2) submits fraudulent information in support of
a license application under this section;
(3) is convicted of, or pleads
guilty or nolo contendere to, or is ordered to serve a period of probation after
being charged with:
(A) a felony;
(B) a crime involving moral
turpitude;
(C) a violation of a controlled dangerous substances law;
or
(D) a violation of any law regulating the practice of a health
occupation;
(4) habitually uses any drug or alcoholic beverage to an extent
that impairs professional performance; or
(5) is grossly negligent in the
performance of massage.
(h) Notice and opportunity for
hearing.
(1) Notice. After finding that one or more grounds for denial,
suspension or revocation of a license could exist, the director may serve a
written notice on the licensee or applicant in person or by regular mail,
postage prepaid, addressed to the person’s last known address as
maintained in the director’s file. Service on that person by mail is
effective three (3) days after mailing. The director must also post a written
notice at a conspicuous place on the establishment for which the license was or
would be issued. The written notice must, at a minimum;
(A) state that the
director has found that the licensee or applicant may be subject to denial,
suspension, or revocation;
(B) identify the specific grounds for the
director’s finding; and
(C) set a date for a hearing on denial of the
application or suspension or revocation of the license. The hearing must be held
at least five (5) days after service of the director’s notice, unless the
parties agree to an earlier date.
(2) Hearing. The director or a designee
may conduct the hearing. At the hearing, the licensee or applicant may present
evidence and witnesses to refute the grounds cited by the director for denying
the application or suspending or revoking the license, and the city and any
other person may submit relevant evidence. The relevant records of the
department are part of the hearing record. Within three (3) days after the
hearing closes, the person conducting the hearing must render a decision in
writing, giving the reasons for the decision. That decision is final and is
subject to judicial review under the Maryland rules for review of administrative
decisions.
(3) Failure to appear. A licensee or applicant who after notice
does not appear at a hearing, waives the right to a hearing and consents to the
action that the director proposed in the notice. The director may deny the
application or suspend or revoke the license as proposed in the
notice.
(4) Notice and effective date of suspension or revocation. The
director’s written decision must be posted at the office of the director
and must be served on the licensee or applicant in person or by regular mail,
postage prepaid, addressed to the applicant or licensee’s last known
address as maintained in the department’s files. The director must also
post a written notice of the decision at a conspicuous place on the
establishment for which the license was or would be issued. A suspension or
revocation takes effect on the day the director’s decision is delivered in
person or posted, whichever occurs first. To facilitate enforcement of this
provision, the director may require the applicant or licensee to appear at the
director’s office at a specific time to receive a copy of the decision and
to be prepared to surrender the license. If a licensee or applicant does not
appear to receive the director’s decision, the director’s decision
is effective on the date and time the licensee or applicant was directed to
appear.
(5) Surrender of license and security. When a license is suspended
or revoked, the director must take custody of the suspended or revoked
license.
(i) Upon receipt of notice of a license revocation or suspension,
unless otherwise directed the licensee must, within twenty-four (24)
hours:
(1) place the license in the mail, postage prepaid, addressed to the
department; or
(2) physically deliver the license to the
department.
(j) If the department does not receive a suspended or revoked
license within forty-eight (48) hours after notification, excluding weekends or
a legal holiday, or as otherwise directed, the holder of the license violates
this section. In addition to any other penalties that may be imposed, the
director or police may:
(1) remove the revoked or suspended license from the
business location; and
(2) close the place of business until the person
operating the business obtains a license.
(k) Appeals.
(1) Any person
aggrieved by the denial, suspension, or revocation of any license under this
section may seek judicial review under the Maryland rules for review of
administrative decisions.
(2) The director’s decision to deny a
license must not be stayed pending appeal. Final administrative action that
revokes or suspends a license may be stayed pending appeal only if;
(A) the
court finds that the public health, safety, or welfare will not be endangered
during the appeal; and
(B) a bond of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) is
posted.
(l) Penalties. In addition to any other penalties provided for in
this section, any person who violates any provision of this section is guilty of
a municipal infraction punishable by a civil penalty of two hundred dollars
($200.00) for the first infraction, five hundred dollars ($500.00) for the
second infraction, and one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) for each subsequent
infraction. (Ord. No. G-02-1, § 1, 3-7-02)
* Editor’s
note--Ordinance G-02-1 § 1 added this section as Section 12-12 Massage.
Since there is already an existing Section 12-12 under Article II, this section
has been redesignated as Section 12-11.1.
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