Colorado Code § 12-245-804

Requirements for licensure, certification, and registration - rules
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(1) 
The board shall issue a license as an addiction counselor to an applicant who files an application
in the form and manner required by the board, submits the fee required by the board pursuant to
section 12-245-205, and submits evidence satisfactory to the board that the applicant:
(a) Is at least twenty-one years of age;
(b) Is not in violation of any provision of this article 245 or any rules promulgated by the
board;
(c) Has completed a master's or doctoral degree in the behavioral health sciences from an
accredited school, college, or university or an equivalent program as determined by the board;
(d) Demonstrates professional competence by:
(I) Passing the master addiction counselor examination administered by the National
Association for Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors, or an equivalent examination
administered by a successor organization; and
(II) Passing a jurisprudence examination administered by the division;
(e) Has met the education requirements specified in the rules promulgated by the state
board of human services in the department of human services pursuant to section 27-80-108
(1)(e.5);
(f) Has completed the number of clock hours of addiction-specific training, as specified
by the board by rule, including training in evidence-based treatment approaches, clinical
supervision, ethics, and co-occurring disorders; and
(g) Has completed at least two thousand direct clinical hours of clinically supervised
work experience in the addiction field. The clinical supervision may be in person or
telesupervision.
(1.5) Repealed.
(2) The board shall issue a certification as an addiction counselor to an applicant who
files an application in the form and manner required by the board, submits the fee required by
the board pursuant to section 12-245-205, and submits evidence satisfactory to the board that the
applicant:
(a) Is at least eighteen years of age;
(b) Is not in violation of any provision of this article 245 or any rules promulgated by the
board or by the state board of human services in the department of human services pursuant to
section 27-80-108 (1)(e);
(c) Has met the requirements for certification as a certified addiction technician or a
certified addiction specialist as specified in rules adopted pursuant to subsection (3) of this
section and as specified in subsection (3.5) of this section.
(3) The state board of addiction counselor examiners shall promulgate rules for
certification of addiction counselors; except that the state board of human services in the
department of human services shall establish by rule education requirements for licensure and
certification in accordance with section 27-80-108 (1)(e) and (1)(e.5).
(3.5) In the rules promulgated pursuant to subsection (3) of this section, the board shall
require that:
(a) A certified addiction technician have:
(I) A high school diploma or its equivalent;
(II) Accrued a minimum of one thousand hours of supervised clinical experience hours
over a minimum of six months, which includes hours accrued prior to the application for
certification so long as the supervised clinical experience hours meet any additional criteria as
defined by the board;
(III) Passed a jurisprudence examination as determined by the board; and
(IV) Passed the national certification addiction counselor level I examination
administered by the National Association for Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors, or an
equivalent examination administered by a successor organization;
(b) A certified addiction specialist have:
(I) A bachelor's degree in a behavioral health concentration or human services
equivalent;
(II) Accrued a minimum of three thousand hours of supervised clinic work hours over a
minimum of eighteen months, which may include the one thousand hours required to be accrued
for certification as a certified addiction technician;
(III) Passed a jurisprudence examination as determined by the board; and
(IV) Passed the national certification addiction counselor level II examination
administered by the National Association for Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors, or an
equivalent examination administered by a successor organization.
(3.7) (a) The board shall register as an addiction counselor candidate a person who files
an application for registration, accompanied by the fee required by section 12-245-205, who is
not in violation of any provision of this article 245 or any rules promulgated by the board, and
who:
(I) Submits evidence satisfactory to the board that the person has met the requirements
of subsections (1)(a), (1)(b), and (1)(c) of this section.
(II) (Deleted by amendment, L. 2024.)
(b) An addiction counselor candidate registered pursuant to this subsection (3.7) is under
the jurisdiction of the board. If the requirements of subsections (1)(d) to (1)(g) of this section are
not met within three years after the date of registration as a candidate or within one year if the
candidate holds an equivalent credential from another state, the registration of the addiction
counselor candidate is subject to the renewal, reinstatement, and delinquency fee provisions
specified in section 12-20-202. Prior to a second or subsequent renewal of an addiction
counselor candidate registration, the registered addiction counselor candidate shall complete
continuing professional competency hours to maintain the registered addiction counselor's
registration as a registered addiction counselor candidate.
(c) On or before December 31, 2024, the board shall begin the rule-making process to
promulgate rules that bring the rules pertaining to addiction counselors into alignment with this
part 8, including:
(I) A requirement to take and pass the Colorado jurisprudence examination to obtain an
addiction counselor candidate registration;
(II) The renewal, reinstatement, and delinquency fee provisions specified in section 12-
20-202; and
(III) The continuing professional competency requirements specified in subsection
(3.7)(b) of this section.
(4) Nothing in this part 8 prevents members of other professions licensed under the laws
of this state from rendering services within their scope of practice as set forth in the statutes
regulating their professional practices so long as they do not represent themselves to be certified
or licensed addiction counselors.

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