November 2007
Ask the Attorney: About semiretiring in Florida
How to semiretire in Florida
By Deborah Green, Esq.
I am a licensed New York chiropractor who will soon be retiring. I’ve been told I can move to Florida, open a chiropractic practice, and hire a chiropractor to work for me even though I am not licensed to practice in Florida. Is this true?
While this arrangement is currently legal, it won’t be after July 1, 2008.
Florida Statute 460.4167 is a new Florida law that describes who may or may not employ a chiropractor.
The law provides that only a sole proprietorship, group practice, partnership, or corporation completely owned by one or more Florida-licensed chiropractic physician(s) or by a Florida-licensed chiropractic physician and his or her spouse, parent, child, or sibling may employ a Florida-licensed chiropractic physician or engage a Florida-licensed chiropractic physician as an independent contractor to provide chiropractic services.
The only exceptions would apply to a practice wholly owned by:
The state of Florida has implemented this new law because it wishes to prevent people who are not Florida-licensed chiropractic physicians from influencing, or otherwise interfering, with the exercise of a chiropractic physician’s independent professional judgment. You may therefore provide leasing or management services to a chiropractic practice, but any such arrangement must be pursuant to a written agreement stating the chiropractic physician who owns the practice expressly maintains complete care, custody, and control of the following:
Deborah Green, Esq., practices law in New York and Florida. If you have any questions concerning legal healthcare issues, e-mail her at healthattorney@aol.com or call 954-923-0923.
DISCLAIMER: This column is provided for educational purposes only. The information presented is not as legal advice and no attorney-client relationship is hereby established.
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