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California Business And Professions Code Section 102.3

Legal Research Home > California Lawyer > Business and Professions Code > California Business And Professions Code Section 102.3

(a) The director may enter into an interagency agreement
with an appropriate entity within the Department of Consumer Affairs
as provided for in Section 101 to delegate the duties, powers,
purposes, responsibilities, and jurisdiction that have been succeeded
and vested with the department, of a board, as defined in Section
477, which became inoperative and was repealed in accordance with
Chapter 908 of the Statutes of 1994.
   (b) (1) Where, pursuant to subdivision (a), an interagency
agreement is entered into between the director and that entity, the
entity receiving the delegation of authority may establish a
technical committee to regulate, as directed by the entity, the
profession subject to the authority that has been delegated.  The
entity may delegate to the technical committee only those powers that
it received pursuant to the interagency agreement with the director.
  The technical committee shall have only those powers that have been
delegated to it by the entity.
   (2) Where the entity delegates its authority to adopt, amend, or
repeal regulations to the technical committee, all regulations
adopted, amended, or repealed by the technical committee shall be
subject to the review and approval of the entity.
   (3) The entity shall not delegate to a technical committee its
authority to discipline a licentiate who has violated the provisions
of the applicable chapter of the Business and Professions Code that
is subject to the director's delegation of authority to the entity.
   (c) An interagency agreement entered into, pursuant to subdivision
(a), shall continue until such time as the licensing program
administered by the technical committee has undergone a review by the
Joint Committee on Boards, Commissions, and Consumer Protection to
evaluate and determine whether the licensing program has demonstrated
a public need for its continued existence.  Thereafter, at the
director's discretion, the interagency agreement may be renewed.

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Last modified: July 31, 2008