Oklahoma Code § 63-1-1949.3

Title 63. Public Health And Safety: Qualifications for license or certification
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A.  The State Department of Health shall have authority to issue
licenses or certifications to qualified persons as long-term care
administrators in accordance with qualification criteria established
by the State Commissioner of Health.
B.  No license or certification shall be issued to a person as a
long-term care administrator unless:
1.  The person shall have submitted evidence satisfactory to the
Department that the person is:
a. not less than twenty-one (21) years of age, and
b. of reputable and responsible character; and
2.  The person shall have submitted evidence satisfactory to the
Department of the person’s ability to be licensed or certified to
serve as a Tier 1 long-term care administrator or Tier 2 long-term
care administrator.
C.  The Commissioner shall have the authority to determine the
qualifications, skill, and fitness of any person to serve as a long-
term care administrator under the applicable provisions of the
Nursing Home Care Act, the Continuum of Care and Assisted Living
Act, the Residential Care Act, and the Adult Day Care Act.  The
Commissioner shall promulgate rules to determine the qualifications
for licensure or certification as a Tier 1 or Tier 2 long-term care
administrator.  Such rules may, at the discretion of the
Commissioner, include a requirement for licensure instead of

certification for either or both of the tiers of long-term care
administrators.
D.  1.  All persons licensed or certified or lawfully serving as
an administrator in their defined facility type shall be permitted
to continue to serve in their current capacity under their current
terms of authorization.  The Commissioner may promulgate rules to
address future certification and licensure requirements for both
tiers of long-term care administrators without effect on the
licensure or certification status of those currently certified or
licensed.  Until such rules are promulgated, current licensure and
certification processes and standards shall remain in place.
2.  To be eligible for licensure or certification as either a
Tier 1 or Tier 2 long-term care administrator, the applicant shall
have successfully completed a training and education program
approved by the Commissioner.
3.  The Commissioner shall not include a requirement for a four-
year degree in any licensing or certification requirements for Tier
2 long-term care administrators.
4.  In addition to the requirement provided by paragraph 2 of
this subsection, to be eligible for licensure or certification as a
Tier 1 long-term care administrator, the applicant shall:
a. hold a baccalaureate degree from an institution of
higher education, or
b. hold an associate degree in a health- or business-
related field or other relevant field as determined by
the Commissioner and have not less than five (5) years
of experience in upper-level management of a long-term
care facility as determined by the Commissioner.
E.  Eligible applicants may sit for the state standards
examination at a testing facility using procedures approved by the
National Association of Long-Term Care Administrator Boards
including, but not limited to, the use of electronic or online
methods for examination.
F.  The State Department of Health shall either:
1.  Approve one or more organizations or agencies to provide
training and education programs for long-term care administrators.
Each such organization or agency shall meet such requirements as may
be prescribed by rules promulgated by the State Commissioner of
Health;
2.  Offer a training and education program for long-term care
administrators conducted by the Department; or
3.  Both approve one or more organizations to provide training
and education programs for long-term care administrators as
described in paragraph 1 of this subsection and offer a training and
education program for long-term care administrators conducted by the
Department as described in paragraph 2 of this subsection.

G.  1.  Each person licensed or certified as a long-term care
administrator under the provisions of this act shall pay an annual
license or certification fee which shall be deposited in the Long-
Term Care Administrator Revolving Fund described in Section 7 of
this act.  Such fee shall be determined by the Commissioner.  Each
such license or certification shall expire on the thirty-first day
of December following its issuance, and shall be renewable for a
calendar year, upon meeting the renewal requirements and upon
payment of the annual licensure or certification fee.
2.  In addition to licensure and certification fees, the
Commissioner may impose fees on agencies and organizations that
provide training and education programs.
3.  All revenues collected as a result of fees authorized in
this section and imposed by the Commissioner shall be deposited into
the Long-Term Care Administrator Revolving Fund described in Section
7 of this act.
H.  The State Commissioner of Health shall promulgate rules to
provide for licensure or certification by endorsement of long-term
care administrators who are licensed or certified in other states
that have requirements for licensure or certification of long-term
care administrators that are substantially equivalent to or greater
than the requirements of this state, as determined by the
Commissioner.
I.  It shall be unlawful for any person to act or serve in the
capacity of a long-term care administrator unless the person is the
holder of a license or certificate as a long-term care
administrator, issued in accordance with the provisions of this act.
A person found guilty of a violation of this subsection shall, upon
conviction, be guilty of a misdemeanor.
Added by Laws 1968, c. 100, § 3, emerg. eff. April 1, 1968.  Amended
by Laws 1991, c. 168, § 3, eff. July 1, 1991; Laws 1995, c. 289, §
2, eff. Nov. 1, 1995; Laws 2006, c. 291, § 3, eff. July 1, 2006;

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