Current through Acts 2023-2024, ch. 1069
Section 63-9-101 - Board - Composition and terms of members - Administrative support(a) There shall be a board of osteopathic examination, referred to as "board" in this chapter, consisting of six (6) persons, appointed by the governor. One (1) of these persons shall be a citizen member who does not engage in any profession, business or activity subject to regulation by the board, and five (5) members shall be osteopathic physicians. These persons shall be residents of this state; and the five (5) osteopathic physician members shall be graduates of a legally chartered osteopathic college in good standing and having the power to confer degrees in osteopathic medicine and shall have been, at the time of their appointment, actively engaged in the practice of their profession for a period of at least five (5) years. In making appointments to the board, the governor shall strive to ensure that at least one (1) person serving on the board is sixty (60) years of age or older and that at least one (1) person serving on the board is a member of a racial minority.(b) Their terms of office shall be so designated by the governor that the term of one (1) member shall expire each year. Thereafter, in each year the governor shall appoint one (1) person to fill the vacancy on the board, the term of the appointee to be five (5) years. A vacancy occurring from any other cause shall be filled by the governor for the unexpired term in the same manner.(c) The board shall have a common seal and shall formulate rules to govern its actions.(d) The board shall receive administrative support from the division of health related boards, referred to as the "division" in this chapter.(e) The board is authorized to issue advisory private letter rulings to an affected licensee who makes such a request regarding matters within the board's primary jurisdiction. The private letter ruling only affects the licensee making the inquiry and has no precedential value for another inquiry or future contested case that might come before the board. The board may resolve a dispute regarding a private letter ruling pursuant to the declaratory order provisions of § 4-5-223.Amended by 2024 Tenn. Acts, ch. 651,s 1, eff. 4/4/2024.Acts 1905, ch. 255, § 1; Shan., § 3654a4; mod. Code 1932, §7003; Acts 1939, ch. 150, §1; C. Supp. 1950, § 7003; Acts 1976, ch. 727, § 1; T.C.A. (orig. ed.), § 63-901; Acts 1984, ch. 937, §38; 1988, ch. 1013, § 47; 1994, ch. 901, § 4; 1996, ch. 1042, § 2.