
Once appointed, the committee will advise the secretary of health on ‘issues related to the practice of music therapy’
Timothy Schumann
The Center Square Washington
Earlier this year, the Washington State Legislature passed a bill allowing the state Department of Health to officially license a new profession: music therapist.
Signed into law by Gov. Jay Inslee on Apr. 18, Substitute House Bill 1247 “establishes music therapy as a new health profession licensed by the Department of Health” and calls for oversight of the new profession by formation of a new advisory committee consisting of five members serving four-year terms.
That committee will be comprised of the following: three individuals who practice music therapy in Washington, one licensed health care professional who is not a music therapist but works with or has collaborated with music therapists, and a consumer of music therapy services
Once appointed, the committee will advise the secretary of health on “issues related to the practice of music therapy” and be limited to compensation of “$50 per day for committee business and are reimbursed for travel expenses and meals.”
According to the legislation’s fiscal note, the program will be largely self funding. According to the fiscal note, the total cost of implementation from 2024 through 2029 is $430,000, or just under $72,000 per year.
Program specifics will be forthcoming.
“We are very early in the rulemaking process and in preparing to implement the requirements, so most of the details are yet to come,” said Frank Ameduri, public information officer for the Executive Office of Public Affairs and Equity with the Department of Health, in an email to The Center square.
“The profession’s licensure to practice begins Jan. 1, 2025,” Ameduri noted. “We expect to begin accepting applications for licensure somewhere around Oct. 1, 2024.”
To date, only two music therapists have applied for advisory committee positions, he added.
The application period has been extended to Aug. 9. Application details can be found on the Department of Health’s website.
This report was first published by The Center Square Washington.
Also read:
- WATCH – Detransitioner to providers: ‘Please just stop’ gender surgeries on minorsDetransitioner Soren Aldaco shared her experience and urged providers to stop encouraging gender surgeries on minors as HHS moves to restrict federal funding for such procedures.
- Without pennies, should retailers round up or down?As the penny disappears from circulation, states and retailers are grappling with how cash purchases should be rounded and who should benefit from those decisions.
- Opinion: IBR promotes ‘giving away’ historic interstate bridges while withholding cost estimate for replacementNeighbors for a Better Crossing argues the IBR program is promoting demolition of the historic Interstate Bridges without releasing updated cost estimates or current seismic data to justify replacement.
- Opinion: Solving Washington’s deficit without tax increasesRyan Frost argues Washington’s budget shortfall is driven by rapid spending growth rather than insufficient tax revenue, calling for slower spending and program reductions instead of new taxes.
- Washington State Patrol loses 34th trooper in the line of dutyWashington State Patrol Trooper Tara-Marysa Guting was killed while investigating a crash on State Route 509 in Tacoma, marking the 34th line-of-duty death in the agency’s history.
- Opinion: Bikes in crosswalksDoug Dahl explains how Washington law treats bicycles as both vehicles and pedestrians, depending on where and how they are being ridden.
- County seeks volunteers to serve on Railroad Advisory BoardClark County is accepting applications to fill up to two positions on a citizen advisory board focused on oversight and guidance for the county-owned Chelatchie Prairie Railroad.








