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Changes
Affecting N.Y. CPE Regulations
On
December 15, 2000, the New York State Board of Regents approved
changes to two regulations that impact continuing professional education
(CPE) requirements for CPA licensees. The first regulation requires
CPAs to complete an ethics CPE course, while the second allows full
credit for interactive self-study CPE.
Licensees are
required by the new ethics regulations to take four hours of ethics-related
CPE courses sometime during every three-year license period.
The second regulation
expands the definition of the types of CPE that receive full credit
to include interactive self-study. Noninteractive self-self study
courses continue to qualify for only one-half CPE credit.
The new regulations
now amend the Commissioner’s regulation section 70.6(b), which sets
out the requirements for CPA continuing education. In its original
form, the regulations did not require any ethics education of CPAs
once licensed. As of the Sept. 1 effective date, CPAs will need
four hours of ethics CPE every three years. The regulation requires
those CPAs who utilize the 24-hour, field-of-concentration CPE track
to take ethics that is related to their field of concentration.
In other words, someone taking 24 hours of tax would need to take
tax ethics courses.
“We intend with
this new regulation to raise the sensibilities of the CPA profession
in New York with a focus on New York State laws, rules, and regulations,”
said P. Robert Fox, chair of the New York State Board for Public
Accountancy.
The CPE regulations
differentiate between self-study continuing education and other
forms of continuing education by permitting self-study to count
for only one-half the credit that other educational approaches (such
as seminars or conferences) do. In other words, an 8-hour self-study
course currently only receives 4 hours of credit for New York licensing
purposes.
The newly approved
Commissioner’s regulation section 70.6(d), which became effective
on Jan. 4 of this year, differentiate between self-study that requires
interaction between the student and the self-study source. Interactive
self-study would qualify for full credit, while noninteractive self-study
would continue to receive only half credit. The Society and FAE
strongly favored this change.
The
Regents' decision came after they considered a proposal for both
regulations last year. As discussed in the November, 2000, and December,
2000, issues of The Trusted Professional, the New York State
Society of CPAs and Foundation for Accounting Education (FAE) submitted
comments endorsing the proposed amendments in November, 2000.
The only major
change the Regents made in approving the regulations as proposed
was to change the effective date of the new ethics requirement,
which was moved to Sept. 1 to give the State Education Department
staff and CPE course developers time to gear up for the new requirement.
The Society’s
and FAE’s earlier comments on the regulation when proposed, approved
of both while making technical suggestions to improve the new ethics
requirement. The comments were drafted by the Professional Ethics
Committee and approved last year by both the Society’s Executive
Committee and FAE’s Board of Trustees.
Click
here to read CPE Requirements
For further
information about these changes please contact Jim Woehlke at jwoehlke@nysscpa.org.
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