The Public Accountancy Act (Accountancy Act) governs the practice of accounting in Washington and the Board of Accountancy (Board) regulates the accounting profession and administers a licensing program for persons and firms that engage in the practice of public accounting.
Certified Public Accountant and Firm Licenses in Washington.
To become a licensed Certified Public Accountant (CPA) in Washington, a person must:
The Accountancy Act defines "firm" as a sole proprietorship, corporation, partnership, or limited liability company, and provides a separate definition for sole proprietorship. Firms that perform, or offer to perform, attest or compilation services, and not otherwise qualifying for an exception, must obtain a firm license and adhere to entity-specific requirements. With specified variations depending on the entity structure of the firm, the general firm requirements are: (1) obtain the appropriate firm license and renew it with the Board every three years; (2) require each resident individual in charge of an office in this state to hold a CPA license; (3) require that at least a simple majority of the ownership of a licensed firm, in terms of financial interests and voting rights, hold a CPA license issued by the state or by another state, and that the principal partner, officer, member, or manager having authority over issuing reports hold a CPA license issued by the state or by another state; (4) require at least one general partner, shareholder, or member of the firm hold an individual CPA license or a practice privilege; and (5) meet requirements established by rule by the Board.
Firms that are structured as corporations are subject to the further requirement for a written agreement binding the corporation or its shareholders to purchase any shares offered for sale by, or not under the ownership or effective control of, a qualified shareholder and binding any holder not a qualified shareholder to sell the shares to the corporation or its qualified shareholders. The corporation may purchase any amount of its stock for this purpose, notwithstanding any impairment of capital, as long as one share remains outstanding.
Each firm office established or maintained in this state must be under the direct supervision of a resident licensee with a state CPA license.
Practice Privilege.
An individual with a principle place of business outside of Washington must be presumed to have qualifications substantially equivalent to Washington's requirements and have all the same privileges of state licensees, without a need to obtain an individual CPA license, if the individual:
Prohibited Actions and Exemptions.
The Accountancy Act expressly prohibits certain practices including, for example: (1) using the designation of "certified public accountant" without holding a license or practice privilege; (2) performance of attest or compilation services by a firm without a firm license and registered offices; and (3) holding oneself out to the public as an auditor without the appropriate licenses. Nothing in the Accountancy Act prohibits any act of, or the use of any words by, a public official or a public employee in the performance of his or her duties.
Certified Public Accountant Firm and Individual Certified Public Accountant License Requirements.
Firms.
The definition of "firm" is modified to include "any other form of organization issued a license" under the Accountancy Act, and the definition for "sole proprietorship" is removed.
Entity-specific CPA firm requirements are removed, and one set of requirements is established for all CPA firms that must obtain a license under the Accountancy Act:
The practice of public accounting in each office of a CPA firm established or maintained in this state must still take place under the direct supervision of a resident licensee with a state CPA license, except that nonlicensees are not precluded from being in charge of a CPA firm.
Individual Licensees.
The requirement that an applicant for a license to practice public accounting possess one year of experience is removed and an applicant must instead meet the experience requirements established by rule by the Board as it seems appropriate.
Practice Privilege.
The requirements for an out-of-state licensee to practice in Washington without obtaining a Washington license are modified. An out-of-state licensee must be presumed to have qualifications having substantial equivalency to this state's requirements if the individual either:
Prohibited and Nonprohibited Practices.
Prohibited practices and their exemptions are consolidated into one section of the Accountancy Act. The Accountancy Act does not prohibit any act of, or the use of any words by, a public official or public employee when, in performance of their duties, they: (1) perform compilation or attest services; and (2) are held out to the public as an auditor.
Other Revisions.
Three causes are added for which the Board may take adverse action against a licensee:
Words referring to gender are replaced with gender neutral terms, references to "substantially equivalent" are replaced with "having substantial equivalency" throughout the Accountancy Act, and certain intent sections and effective date provisions are removed.
(In support) This bill reflects Washington's updating of its accountancy statute to be in line with the Uniform Accountancy Act (UAA), which Washington adopted in 2001. It also cleans up and removes outdated language, aligning more with the UAA. The last update was in 2016 and it's time to ensure we are remaining aligned with the UAA. The Uniform Accountancy Act is used by all 55 jurisdictions of the United States and its territories, and allows its professionals in Washington to have mobility within the profession.
Substantively, the bill updates CPA firm requirements, the practice privilege, and substantial equivalency standards. It makes it easier for CPAs and CPA firms to understand licensing requirements, and it combines the prohibited and nonprohibited practices so CPAs and the public can understand these better. It also adds language around the direct supervision requirement for offices, providing the person in charge of an office does not necessarily need to be a CPA. It removes the one-year requirement for experience for licensure and allows the Board to define that rule, similar to education and examination requirements currently. The Board feels there are no changes that hinder the Board's purpose.
(Opposed) None.
Representative Eric Robertson, prime sponsor; Michael Paquette, Washington State Board of Accountancy; and Lisa Thatcher, Washington Society of Certified Public Accountants.