Carter Gale (786-7290) and Jim Morishima (786-7191).
The Pharmacy Quality Assurance Commission (Commission) regulates the practice of pharmacy, including qualifications for the licensure of pharmacists and pharmacy interns. It suggests strategies concerning drug misuse, diversion, and abuse. It promulgates rules concerning drugs and devices.
The Commission consists of 15 members. All members are residents of Washington and are appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate. Each member serves a four-year term and may only serve two terms at most. Ten members are pharmacists, one is a pharmacy technician, and four are public members. Pharmacist members shall have been a registered pharmacist in Washington for the five years prior to their appointment. Public members may not be "affiliated with any aspect of pharmacy."
One of the ten seats reserved for pharmacist members of the Commission may either be filled by a pharmacist member, or a public member who is an owner, operator, or officer of a pharmacy. The public member may not be licensed as a pharmacist or pharmacy technician.
The substitute bill modifies the position that is filled by a public member who is an owner, operator, or officer of a pharmacy. Rather than one of the four positions reserved for public members, an owner, operator, or officer of a pharmacy may fill one of the ten positions reserved for pharmacist members.
(In support) Under current law, the only residents who cannot sit on the Commission are those who are not pharmacists or pharmacy technicians but are affiliated with a pharmacy by being an owner, operator, or officer of a pharmacy. Members of this group offer an important and unrepresented perspective about the duties of the Commission and are directly impacted by the Commission's activities. The Commission's membership is also regularly unfilled, and expanding who may sit on the Commission ensures more participation. It is important that this perspective is represented, not necessarily that the member is one of the four designated public members.
(Opposed) The Commission regulates the practice of pharmacy, and the key to those duties is protecting members of the public from harm done by pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, and the owners, operators, and officers of pharmacies. The four public members of the commission are supposed to represent the clients of pharmacies and pharmacists, and allowing one of those public members to be affiliated with a pharmacy undermines the important check on the other members of the commission. The ten members of the commission who are pharmacists also already represent the perspective of pharmacy owners, operators, and officers. It would be better to have one of those ten seats available for an owner, operator, or officer who is not a pharmacist, but it is not ideal.
(In support) Representative Sam Low, prime sponsor; Rick Hughes, Ray's Pharmacy; and Jenny Arnold, Washington State Pharmacy Association.